The report delivered
by Jiang Zemin to the 16th National Congress of the
Communist Party of China (CPC) has clearly put forward the
objective of building a well-off society in an all-round way
in China.
The term
"well-off society", which means a society in which
all people lead a fairly comfortable life, was first used by
late Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping, who was reputed as the
"chief architect" of China's reform and opening up
drive.
"Our goal is to
build a well-off society by the year 2000," Deng had
said when reform and opening up was launched in the late
1970s.
However, on its way to
a well-off society, the world's most populous nation first
had to help all its people to shake off poverty and get
adequately fed and decently dressed. It took abouttwo
decades for China to achieve this preliminary success.
Starting from the late 1980s,
the CPC and the Chinese government have worked hard for the
historic leap in people's life from being adequately fed and
dressed to being well-off. Thanks tothe fast-paced
advancement of reform and opening up and a sustained rapid
economic growth, this goal was basically attained at the end
of the last century.
The
United Nations has applied the Engel Coefficient, which
indicates the proportion of food expenditure in total
consumption,as a major index for judging living standards of
people of variousnations. Normally a society can be labeled
as "well-off" if its Engel Coefficient is between
40 and 50 percent.
In 1998,
China's Engel Coefficient was 44.5 percent in towns and
cities and 53.4 percent in rural areas, very close to the UN
standard for "being well-off".
Nevertheless, Jiang's report
to the Party Congress pointed out that the Chinese people's
well-off life is "still at a low level","not
all-inclusive" and "very uneven". "We
need to work hard over a long period of time to consolidate
and uplift our current well-off standard of living",
according to the report. Enditem
Xinhuanet 2002-11-09