http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/03/09/AR2006030902114.html?nav=rss_world
HUAXI, China -- Wu Renbao saw the future of his little village long ago, and
it worked. It worked so well that Huaxi has become the richest village in China.
As a result, Huaxi has been cited by Communist Party leaders as an example of
what they mean when they vow to build a "new socialist countryside" to help
farmers share in China's prosperity and create a stable rural community.
Wu Renbao.
[newsphoto] |
Although it is doubtful Huaxi's
exceptional wealth can be duplicated everywhere, the transformation of this
community, in Jiangsu province 85 miles northwest of Shanghai, has inspired
imitation in a number of villages. In the process, it has opened a window on
what China's Communist Party hopes will be the future of this huge, fast-growing
nation.
Huaxi's success story began in 1969, when Wu, who was the local party
secretary, overcame bitter opposition from Cultural Revolution extremists to
start a village-owned textile factory. The village took off a decade later when,
again under Wu's leadership, Huaxi residents decided against dividing communal
land into family farms, as encouraged under the economic reforms then getting
started. They opted to retain village control, retire their plows and build more
factories, embracing urbanization instead of fighting it as millions of farmers
with family plots have done in recent years.
The decision to stay communal and branch out from agriculture coincided with
the rising tide of China's new economy, as liberalizing reforms spread through
the 1980s and '90s. Without questioning the party's political control, Huaxi and
its go-go socialism have ridden the economic wave ever since. The community has
founded eight large corporations, with earnings of $3.8 billion, and relegated
farming to a museum-like tract of land where children come to see what squash
and mango plants look like.
Annual per capita income has grown to $8,000, village leaders said, seven
times the national average and 20 times the average for farmers. Many
townspeople, although still classified as peasants, are now managers, living in
two-story houses on landscaped lots reminiscent of the Washington suburbs. The
Huaxi government has made sure the entire population of 30,000 has health
insurance and pensions, things many of China's 750 million farmers only dream
about.
"Huaxi is the No. 1 village in China," boasted Sun Haiyan, Wu's 26-year-old
grandson, who studied in New Zealand and now runs a village-owned import-export
business. "That means rich."
The children of Huaxi enjoy not only well-equipped schools with bilingual
Chinese-English classes but also the opportunity to play in an amusement park
that features replicas of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris, the U.S. Capitol and
Beijing's Tiananmen gate. Nearby, construction has begun on a $2.4 million clock
tower whose giant bell, Wu predicted cheerfully, will be heard for 10 miles
around.
Local party cadres from across China have taken to visiting Huaxi by the
busload, seeking to learn from Wu's success. More than a million people visited
here in 2005, village leaders said, and the number is expected to rise to 1.8
million this year because of President Hu Jintao's emphasis on rural reforms and
the drumbeat of propaganda about the "new socialist countryside."
Wu, 79 but still quick and tart, addressed several hundred of the visitors
last week, repeating party catchwords such as "scientific development" and
"democratic administration" as he urged them to follow Huaxi's entrepreneurial
example. His eyes sparkled and he flashed his brown teeth in frequent smiles as
he described Huaxi's meteoric rise from poor farm village to industrial park.
"Every month we change things in Huaxi," he said. "Every year, things are
better."
His 30-minute homily finished, Wu turned the stage over to a performance of
political theater, complete with bubble machines and girls in diaphanous
costumes. To recorded music, young dancers and acrobats pranced about, singing
the praises of socialism, enterprise and Huaxi's hybrid of the two.
"We don't worry if the factories are free enterprise, we don't worry if the
factories are socialist," went one refrain. "We would just worry if there were
no factories."
What the visitors see here resembles nothing so much as a company town run by
a patriarchal family with a successful business and strict loyalty to the
political system. After years at the helm, Wu recently turned over management of
Huaxi to his fourth son, Wu Xie'en, 39, who is now party secretary. In an
interview, the younger Wu said that despite the title, his guiding principle was
not doctrine but efficiency.
"If you go talk to a farmer about Marxism or Leninism, he won't know what
you're talking about," he said. "But if you say socialism is about trying to
create a happy life for him, then he knows what you mean."
The elder Wu said in an interview that he had no trouble persuading Huaxi's
farmers to forgo control over their land 25 years ago. By then, he explained,
the first factory was already producing more for villagers' pockets than their
fields were, so the idea of turning to industry was appealing even to
tradition-minded farmers.
"If you just grow crops, you don't really have a very rich life," he said,
still dressed like a farmer on a Sunday outing, in a plain gray jacket and
rubber-soled slippers that sell for less than $1. "You've got to have money.
Without money, everything is just empty words."
In his unpretentious home, Wu seemed to live by his words. In a room
decorated mostly with photos of him greeting party dignitaries, there also hung
a large portrait of Deng Xiaoping, the late leader credited with putting China
on the road to reform; beside that was a photo of a Mercedes 300SL, the
gull-wing sports car that for many symbolized wealth and luxury 50 years ago.
Wu said that although he was a loyal party member, he followed some
guidelines from the party's Central Committee and tailored others to suit his
pursuit of profit as the years went by and his little village of 2,000 farmers
expanded. That, he said, is what the party means by "democratic administration."
Huaxi's citizens, numbering 30,000 after the incorporation of neighboring
villages, have turned into shareholders, earning salaries, a monthly stipend
based on earnings and annual bonuses for good work. Most are in management. Of
the 80,000 people working as laborers and clerks in Huaxi, only 5 percent are
locals, according to Gavin Wu, a trading company manger who is deputy party
secretary.
The rest are outside workers, drawn by Huaxi's prosperity. If they are
permanently hired, they receive Huaxi benefits such as health insurance, Gavin
Wu added, but many are temporary migrants. Although most of Huaxi's corporate
wealth is communal, about 200 businesses, chiefly small shops, are privately
owned, he said, with annual income of $125 million.
One owner, Xu Jun, 39, who just opened an athletic-shoe store on the main
square, said he came to the village 10 years ago as a laborer and has decided to
stay. "It's a pretty good place to live," he said.