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China
is the world's third largest country and biggest developing
country in terms of its geographical area of 9.6 million square
kilometers and its population of about 1.3 billion. Its government
administration is divided into three basic levels: provinces
(autonomous regions, municipalities directly under the Central
Government), counties (cities, banners, special districts,
industrial-agricultural district, forest district), and townships
(towns) administratively. There are 23
provinces, 5 autonomous regions,
4 municipalities, and 2
special administration regions directly under the Central
Government.
| Provinces |
|
Anhui Province |
Jiangxi
Province |
|
Fujian Province |
Jilin
Province |
|
Gansu Province |
Liaoning
Province |
|
Guangdong(Canton) Province |
Qinghai
Province |
|
Guizhou Province |
Shaanxi
Province |
|
Hainan Province |
Shandong
Province |
|
Hebei Province |
Shanxi
Province |
|
Heilongjiang Province |
Sihuan
(Szechwan) Province |
|
Henan Province |
Taiwan
Province |
|
Hubei Province |
Yunnan
Province |
|
Hunan Province |
Zhejiang
Province |
|
Jiangsu Province |
|
| Autonomous
Regions |
| Guangxi
Zhuang Autonomous Region |
Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region |
| Nei
Mongol (Inner Mongolia) Autonomous Region |
Xizang
(Tibet) Autonomous Region |
| Ningxia
Hui Autonomous Region |
|
| Municipalities |
| Beijing(Peking)
Municipality |
Tianjin
Municipality |
| Shanghai
Municipality |
ChongQing
Municipality |
| Special
Administration Regions |
| Hong
Kong Special Administration Region |
Macau
Special Administration Region |
|
In 1978,
the Chinese government adopted the economic reform program
to transform the Chinese economy from a socialist central
planning system into a market economy. Since 1980, the Chinese
government has established 5 Special
Economic Zones to foreign investment. In 1984, it further
opened 14 Coastal Cities to attract
overseas investment. Since 1988, the Chinese government has
been extended its opening to its border areas, areas along
the Yangtze River and inland areas.
| Special
Economic Zones |
|
Shenzhen |
Shantou |
|
Zhuhai |
Hainan
Province |
|
Xiamen |
|
| Open
Coastal Cities |
| Beihai |
Qinhuangdao |
| Dalian |
Qingdao |
| Fuzhou |
Shanghai |
| Guangzhou |
Tianjin |
| Lianyungang |
Wenzhou |
| Nantong |
Yantai |
| Ningbo |
Zhanjiang |
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In June
1990, the Chinese government decided to open the Pudong New
Zone in Shanghai to overseas investment, and opened more cities
along the Yangtze River valley. With Shanghai's Pudong as
the "dragon head", a chain of open cities has been
extended up the Yangtze River valley. Between March and July
of 1992, the State Council further opened a number of border
cities and all the capital cities of inland provinces and
autonomous regions. Additionally, 15 free trade zones, 32
state-level economic and technological development zones,
and 53 new- and high-tech industrial development zones have
been established in large and medium-sized cities. At the
twenty-one century, the Chinese government has begun to implement
the strategy for the wide-ranging development of Western China,
including Shaanxi, Gansu, Qinghai, Sichuan, Yunnan and Guizhou
provinces, the Ningxia Hui, Xinjiang Uygur and Tibet autonomous
regions, and Chongqing Municipality.
The Chinese
economy has been formed by a multi-level, multi-channel, omni-directional,
and diversified pattern of opening, integrating coastal areas
with riverine, border, and inland areas. The Chinese government
adopts different preferential policies in different open areas.
As a result, they play the dual roles of "Windows"
in developing the foreign-oriented economy, generating foreign
exchanges through exporting products and importing advanced
technologies and of "radiators" in accelerating
inland economic development.
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