This week I was in Chongqing, one of the
biggest cities in China, to address a business conference. Chongqing has a
total population of 32 million people, of whom 10 million live in the city
proper. I had expected that the weather would be very hot, but in fact it was
misty, humid and showery, which was much more comfortable.
Chongqing is in the inland, western, part
of China. It was the capital during the Second World War, when Japan occupied
all of coastal eastern China from 1937 to 1945. It was heavily bombed and 200,000 people lost their lives.
I had meetings with the Mayor, Professor Huang Qifan, and the
Vice Mayor, Liu Xue Pu. I also had discussions with the Chongqing Financial
Affairs Office, the Bank of Chongqing and with the Chongqing Rural Commercial
Bank on the possibilities of closer links with Ireland and Europe. I told them
about the international financial services industry in Ireland, which services business all over the world, benefitting from the fact that
Ireland is the only English
speaking country in the euro
currency.
Chongqing is growing very rapidly. It has
the fastest economic growth rate (11% this year) in China.
It is a major manufacturer of cars and
motor bikes, and is the largest producer of laptop computers in all China. It is home to Asia’s largest aluminium
plant. Electricity is provided by the nearby Three Gorges hydroelectric project,
the largest in the world, whose construction required the resettlement of a
million people.
The Mayor told me Chongqing is a transport
hub for western China. It is an
inland port for oceangoing cargo coming up the Yangtze . It has links by rail to
India, via Myanmar, and to Europe via Central Asia and Russia and a large international
airport . A pipeline is also being
built bring Middle Eastern crude oil from the Indian ocean for refining in
Chongqing.
All this is part of the rapid development
of China.
In 1990, China was only 4% of the world economy. Now it is
14%.
In 2000, China contributed one tenth of all the economic
growth in the world. Last year it contributed one third.
In 1990, 60% of Chinese people lived in absolute poverty. Now
only 10% do so.
The growth is unevenly spread. Urban areas
have experienced rapid growth in incomes, while rural areas have lagged behind.
This has given rise to wide overall income inequality. But within urban China,
income inequality is less than in the United States, and no greater than in
Ireland or Britain.
Like Europe and the United States, China
will eventually face a huge problem of supporting an enlarged elderly
population. Age dependency in China will rise from 0.11 in 2010, to 0.24 in
2030, and to 0.43 in 2050. In this respect, China is very different to India,
Africa and the Middle East which have had higher birth rates. This difference in the rates of ageing
of various countries will eventually change in balance of
power in the world in ways that we have not yet begun to contemplate.
Chinese families are investing heavily in
education. 22% of Chinese complete third level education. Only 8% of Indians
do.
My major worry about the development of
China is the extent to which it relies on coal to provide power. Coal burning
has a very damaging effect on the climate. Water supplies are also being depleted through irrigation
and global warming. In China, as
in the United States, water from underground reservoirs, that have been undisturbed for millenia , are being run down to supply wasteful and unsustainable systems of irrigation.
A shortage of water affects the price of food.
It takes 20000 litres of water to produce 1 kilogram of meat,
as against just 1200 litres to produce a kilogram of grain.
As people become better off, and want more meat in their diet, this
will lead to more and more competition for water resources, and
water is one thing Ireland is not short of.....yet!
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