China's increasing importance in the
international community implies a great responsibility and the challenge of
making that compatible with its internal needs, a Brazilian expert said
Thursday.
As China climbs toward one of the top positions in the world economy, its
political and diplomatic weight increases, Luis Antonio Paulino, a world
economy professor and head of the Confucius Institute at Sao Paulo State
University, said in an interview with Xinhua.
"China's actual contribution to the growth of the world economy is higher
than the United States'," Paulino said.
The professor said China plays a key role in the world's economic growth,
which puts the country in a position similar to other powers in the past.
Paulino pointed out that China remained relatively isolated from the
world economy until 1978 when it began to open itself up to the world.
"With the reform and opening policy started in 1978, China not only
transformed its economic system from a centralized planned economy to a
socialist market economy, but also integrated to the global economy. China
is, today, an economy more open than Japan," he said.
China's external trade, Paulino said, represents more than 60 percent of
its gross domestic product, which means that the country's "fantastic
economic growth in the past years has created opportunities for income and
employment not only in China, but in all countries."
INTERNATIONAL INFLUENCE
China's rapid economic development, Paulino said, means its opinions on
any subject, from the reorganization of the international financial system to
the environment and world security, "are listened to attentively by all
countries and leaders in the world."
If that shows recognition of China's strength, the professor said, it
also means a great responsibility because what happens in China has
increasing repercussions on the rest of the planet.
Countries such as the United States and Great Britain became world powers
when they were already relatively rich, and that allowed them to make certain
concessions to exercise their leadership. China, Paulino said, is becoming a
power but is still a developing country.
"This is a great contradiction which poses a double challenge for China:
worrying about its internal development and about the repercussions of its
policies in the rest of the world," the professor said.
He said that it's necessary for China to develop a healthy and positive
relationship with the rest of the world.
"China has one fifth of the world's population, and its culture and
civilization have great contributions to the progress of the humanity,"
Paulino said. "China's cooperation with all countries with mutual respect
fits its position and will promote the balanced global development."
2009年7月14日星期二
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