Three decades after China enshrined the goal of a “socialist market economy” in its constitution, the era of “reform and opening up” appears to have ended, say experts.
Thirty years ago, on March 29, 1993, China formally amended its constitution and adopted the “socialist market economy” as the country’s economic system.
The move marked a significant step in the nation’s decades-long economic “reform and opening-up” process, which began in 1978 following years of political, social and economic upheaval caused by the Great Leap Forward and the Cultural Revolution.
It laid the foundation for the “development of the socialist rule of law,” and by incorporating the concept into the constitution, shaped the direction of China’s economic development, according to the People’s Daily, the newspaper of the Chinese Communist Party’s Central Committee.
“China’s first real major economic reform began in the rural areas in the 1980s, when state-run factories were converted into private ones and some local officials began their own small factories,” said Dexter Roberts, a senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Indo-Pacific Security Initiative.
Accelerating reforms
According to Jane Golley, an economist at the Australian National University (ANU), this first wave of economic opening-up boosted rural incomes and facilitated some migration of China’s vast rural population.
The agricultural reforms and the establishment of special economic zones also helped, she added.
The reform and opening-up process accelerated after Deng Xiaoping, China’s paramount leader at the time, embarked on his famous “southern tour” in early 1992, when he visited key coastal cities and delivered speeches highlighting the need to remain steadfast on the reform path.
Following the tour, the focus of economic reform shifted from rural to urban areas.
Roberts from the Atlantic Council told DW that one important feature of China’s urban economic reform was that the Communist Party gave entrepreneurs and enterprises more autonomy to make decisions.
“Entrepreneurs took things into their own hands and they began to decide what they wanted to produce or what they wanted to sell,” he said.
Privatization and entry into WTO
In the subsequent years, China carried out a series of industrial reforms, including the prominent program of “Grasp the Large and Let Go of the Small,” in which the government tried to maintain control over some of the largest state-owned enterprises (SOE) while giving up control over smaller SOEs.
Jiang Zemin, China’s president from 1993 to 2003, oversaw rapid economic growth, and also changed the constitution to let private entrepreneurs and enterprises play a more important role in the economy, Roberts said.
“Jiang allowed private entrepreneurs to become party members, which was a huge deal,” he noted.
In 2001, China joined the World Trade Organization, another pivotal moment that further opened the Asian nation up to the global economy. “It was a very long process that involved significant commitment [from China] to play the game more in line with the global economic order,” Golley from ANU said.
Andrew Collier, managing director at Orient Capital Research, said that joining the WTO accelerated Chinese growth and turned the country into a global industrial powerhouse.
During the first decade of this century, China relied on exports, infrastructure investment and the property market to maintain a high-level economic growth.
In 2010, China officially overtook Japan to become the world’s second-largest economy, based on nominal GDP.
However, problems began to surface as external demand dropped, debt started to pile up and corruption became rampant.