China’s development never gift from the US

By Zhong Sheng

SINCE China’s reform and opening-up, the Chinese people have made remarkable achievements in development with their diligence and wisdom under the leadership of the Communist Party of China (CPC).
Over the decades, China’s rapid development, which has benefited from exchanges and cooperation with countries around the world, has in turn provided sustained growth impetus and important opportunities for other countries, including the U.S. It is both an indisputable fact and a general consensus among the international community.
However, some U.S. politicians have shamelessly attempted to tamper with history and made the ridiculous argument that China’s reform and opening-up is the U.S. saving China by nature.
Such brazen acts, which have revealed extremely unhealthy mindset of certain politicians in the U.S., are the results of ignorance, shameless political calculations and ulterior motives.
It must be understood that any country’s development depends essentially on itself, and no country should ever claim itself as a savior of another country. It is even more impossible for China, a major country with 1.4 billion people, to have relied on gifts from foreign countries for development.
“Openness brings progress while seclusion leads to backwardness,” said Chinese President Xi Jinping, adding that China cannot develop itself in isolation from the world, and the world needs China for global prosperity. This is also one of the valuable inspirations China’s reform and opening-up has offered the world.
Thanks to China’s policy of reform and opening-up, China and developed countries including the U.S. have been able to complement one another in terms of production factors and eventually enjoy mutually beneficial and win-win results, interconnected growth and common prosperity.
It’s worth mentioning that China has had to constantly overcome suppression, obstruction and interception from the U.S. in the course of its development.
In the early 1990s, the U.S. imposed large-scale economic sanctions on China and prevented China from restoring its status as a signatory to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Later, it has hindered China’s entry into the World Trade Organization (WTO) and unilaterally provoked economic and trade frictions against China.
It is by surmounting numerous difficulties along the road of openness and development that China has secured remarkable achievements. Such achievements should be ultimately attributed to the Chinese people, who have constantly promoted reform and opening-up and struggled for development with their diligence and wisdom under the leadership of the CPC.
Great achievements come from lofty morals and huge courage, said Henry Kissinger, former U.S. Secretary of State, adding that China’s economic achievements derived from China’s self-confidence, rather than the support of foreign governments. The U.S. was faced with some major challenges and needed China’s development, he noted.
China’s economic miracle is in fact the result of great heart-touching efforts and hard work. During its development, the country has relied on the solid and unremitting efforts of generations of Chinese people, which is represented in the typical case of “800 million shirts in exchange for a Boeing airplane”.
It has also relied on fulfilling its own responsibility in good times and in adversity, without exporting or shifting problems elsewhere, but blazing its own path with bold experiments, based on its own conditions, experience and lessons as well as the achievements of other civilizations. China’s door is by no means only open for the U.S., but for all countries and regions in the world.
China has become the world’s second largest economy, one of the largest trading partners of world’s major economies, and a major stabilizer and engine of the world economy.
The country has actually used more than $2 trillion of foreign capital accumulatively since the beginning of its statistics for foreign investment in 1987, of which over $80 billion has been from the U.S., accounting for only about 4 percent of China’s total inbound foreign investment.
– The Daily Mail-People’s Daily news exchange item