Xi's inspection accentuates China's high-quality development commitment
BEIJING -- The latest footprints of Chinese President Xi Jinping have revealed the country's unwavering determination to pursue high-quality growth, which is key to its modernization drive.
In his first inspection trip outside Beijing following the conclusion of this year's annual "two sessions", Xi, also general secretary of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and chairman of the Central Military Commission, visited east China's Fujian Province.
His tour to the Chinese province, where he previously worked for about 17 years, came as China reaffirmed its commitment to people-centered high-quality development as it enters a new development stage.
Fujian is one of the key places where Xi's thought on ecological civilization was conceived and put into practice.
The thought, exemplified by the Chinese leader's well-known remarks "Lucid waters and lush mountains are invaluable assets," profoundly reveals the general laws of economic development and environmental protection in the development of humanity.
Xi's latest green footprints echoed China's green ambition which has been fully illustrated in the country's newly approved development blueprint for the next five to 15 years to guide the country's march toward modernization.
The document set the goal of significantly lowering China's energy consumption per unit of GDP and its carbon dioxide emissions per unit of GDP.
Having taken notes from the West, China will not choose a development path that consumes a large quantity of non-renewable natural resources in the process of its modernization.
When underscoring the importance of independent innovation, Xi called for accelerating the pace to achieve self-reliance in science and technology. It has been a consensus in China that innovation is the primary driving force behind development and China must pursue innovation-driven growth and make breakthroughs in key technologies to achieve high-quality development.
China's high-quality development also entails development of the people and for the people.
In Fujian, Xi talked about people's health which the leader called a hallmark of socialist modernization.
He also underlined promoting rural vitalization, preserving history and heritage as well as deepening education reforms to ensure the sector's non-profit and public-welfare nature.
In China's modernization vision, there is not only a drastic increase in economic production capacity but also comprehensive social progress. China seeks a people-centered modernization that is different from the Western model in which capital is the primary driver and dominant logic.
The Chinese leader's latest inspection has unequivocally sent a message that high-quality development is a path leading to China's socialist modernization. Efforts must be made to ensure high-quality development and meet people's aspirations for a better life.
The views don't necessarily reflect those of Qiushi Journal.