Statistics: the GDP growth rate of provinces with large economic aggregate is significantly lower
statistics: the GDP growth rate of provinces with large economic aggregate is significantly lower
China Construction machinery information
Guide: the national economic comprehensive competitiveness research center released the report on the development of China's provincial economic comprehensive competitiveness during the Eleventh Five Year Plan period on the 29th. Experts at the meeting said that although the overall competitiveness of China's regional economy was improving during the Eleventh Five Year Plan period, and the gap between them had narrowed, could it be sustained in the future
in the research on the comprehensive competitiveness of the national economy, many plastic flexible packaging information factories and printing factories have formed a great loss of heart. On the 29th, the report on the development of the comprehensive competitiveness of China's provincial economy during the "Eleventh Five Year Plan" was released. At the meeting, experts said that although the comprehensive competitiveness of China's regional economy was generally improving during the "Eleventh Five Year Plan" period, and the gap between them had narrowed, whether it could continue to face new challenges in the future. Judging from the competitiveness ranking of 31 provincial-level administrative regions in China, which is still in the deep development stage of industrialization, informatization, urbanization, marketization and internationalization, Shanghai has dropped two places. Some experts believe that this shows its industrial competitiveness. Researchers at Munich University of technology have developed a kind of sustainable use with fuel, which is declining
according to the report, in 2010, Jiangsu, Guangdong and Shanghai ranked third among the 31 provincial-level administrative regions in China, according to IKv. Compared with 2006, Jiangsu rose by three places, Guangdong remained unchanged, and Shanghai fell by two places. Although Shanghai is still in the top three compared with 2006, the decline in ranking made Jin Bei, director of the Institute of industrial economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, doubt that Shanghai's industrial competitiveness has shifted, and he even said that Shanghai's manufacturing industry is declining
Jin Bei said, "where is China's industrial competitiveness going and which province can become a truly strong industrial province? This is a big question mark. Shanghai's manufacturing industry is now declining. Where is China's industrial competitiveness and whether there can be a strong and competitive Province, which is very worth studying."
according to Li Minrong, vice president of the China Association of regional economics and one of the chief editors of the report, compared with 2006 at the beginning of the eleventh five year plan, the average score of the country's four major regional economic comprehensive competitiveness increased significantly in 2010 at the end of the Eleventh Five Year Plan, of which the western region increased the most, followed by the central region and the northeast region, and the average score of the eastern region increased relatively slightly. This reflects that the comprehensive economic competitiveness of the provinces in the central and western regions has increased relatively fast on average, and the gap with the eastern region has gradually narrowed, which shows that the coordination of the development of the comprehensive economic competitiveness of the four regions in China is increasing, and the balance is improving to a certain extent
however, Han Jun, deputy director of the development research center of the State Council, believes that although the coordination and balance of China's economic development have been enhanced during the "Eleventh Five Year Plan", there is still great uncertainty whether this momentum can be maintained. Now the economic development of the whole region is facing some new situations and challenges
according to Han Jun, the new challenges come from five aspects. First of all, exports in coastal areas, and even in some central and western regions, have significantly reduced their contribution and pulling effect on regional economic growth. Secondly, the demographic dividend is gradually disappearing from the national perspective, and the coastal areas are more clear. Those counties and cities with rapid economic development and strong investment attraction are facing the problem of employment difficulties to varying degrees, and the cost of factor labor is rising rapidly. Thirdly, the GDP growth rate of provinces with relatively large coastal economic aggregate has declined significantly, and the potential growth rate has dropped significantly
in addition, both the industrial upgrading of coastal areas and the promotion of industrialization in the central and western regions, including the transfer of manufacturing industry from coastal areas to the central and western regions, are now under double pressure. One is that now the United States and some European countries have put forward the goal of Reindustrialization, competing for the development of technology intensive industries and strategic emerging industries along China's coast. The other is that the labor cost of developing countries around China is very low, and the competitive advantage is becoming more and more obvious, forming a competition for the transfer of coastal manufacturing to the central and western regions. This is very obvious in some industries, and the orders of enterprises have decreased significantly. In addition, resource and environmental constraints are intensifying in all provinces
LINK
Copyright © 2011 JIN SHI