The urbanization rate in China will rise from the current 37 per
cent to 75 per cent within the next 50 years, according to the
Report released. Within the next five decades, the population in
cities and towns will reach between 1.1 billion and 1.2 billion,
while a well-organized, complementary and optimized "urban system"
will be set up.
The report described this system as open, mobile, well-organized
and complementary. Such an urban system is expected to solve the
problems faced by the current urbanization process in China, such
as the fact that the big cities are still not considered big enough
and the medium-sized ones do not play as active a role in the
Chinese economy as they should.
Around 100 experts and scholars from China and abroad produced the
report, the first in China on urban development.
According to the report, only 11 per cent of the Chinese population
live in cities with populations of 1 million or more. This compares
to the world average level of 16 per cent.
The Chinese mainland has 662 cities and more than 20,000 towns,
with a combined total population of over 480 million.
China's current low degree of urbanization, its insufficient urban
population and economic scale in many large cities have limited
economic development and affected national competitiveness, said
scientist Niu Wenyuan, one of the report's main authors.
Jiang Zhenghua, vice-chairman of the Standing Committee of the
National People's Congress, said at the report's launch ceremony
yesterday that China's urbanization still lags behind that of
developed countries.
(People’s Daily December 20, 2002)
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