http://www.nytimes.com/2006/10/12/world/asia/12china.html?_r=1&ref=world&oref=slogin 
Beijing --  China's Communist Party, devoted in recent years to 
expanding the economy at any cost, on Wednesday endorsed a new doctrine that 
puts more emphasis on tackling the severe side effects of unrestrained growth. 
 
 
 
 
The annual meeting of the ruling party's Central Committee formally adopted 
President Hu Jintao's proposal to "build a harmonious socialist society," a move 
some analysts said was one of most decisive shifts in the party's thinking since 
Deng Xiaoping accelerated the push for high growth rates in the early 1990¡¯s. 
The leadership declared that a range of social concerns, including the 
surging wealth gap, corruption, pollution and access to education and medical 
care, must be placed on a par with economic growth in party theory and 
government policy. 
"There are many conflicts and problems affecting social harmony," the Central 
Committee said in a statement released Wednesday after the close of its four-day 
planning session. "Our party has to be more proactive in recognizing and 
dissolving these contradictions." 
China's economy has recently been expanding at better than 10 percent 
annually, faster than any other major economy in the world, and the party shows 
no signs of trying to sharply reduce that rate soon. 
China needs much higher growth rates than most developed countries to absorb 
tens of millions of surplus workers, and even the plans for addressing 
environmental woes and creating a sounder welfare system assume surging tax 
revenues to pay for them. 
"A harmonious society above all needs development," the statement said. 
But the "harmonious society" theme contains a multitude of political 
positions that reflect Hu's agenda as he has consolidated his power. 
He has campaigned doggedly to reduce the party's addiction to state-backed 
investment projects, politically driven expansion of industry and infrastructure 
and conversion of state-owned land for speculative real estate development. The 
fear is that many such projects generate poor economic returns and add to 
China's pollution, already among the worst in the world. 
Local officials have tended to ignore central directives on creating a more 
sustainable and less speculation-driven economy, partly because they still 
believe that they will not be promoted unless they can show stellar production 
results in their domains. 
Hand-in-hand with the "harmonious society" drive, President Hu and Zeng 
Qinghong, the vice president and the leader of the party's secretariat, have 
undertaken the most sustained crackdown on official corruption since the party 
first embraced market-oriented economic measures nearly three decades ago. 
The anticorruption sweep has already resulted in the detention of Chen 
Liangyu, the powerful party boss of Shanghai, as well as senior officials in 
Beijing, Tianjin, Fujian, Hunan and other places. 
But party officials acknowledge that corruption is endemic in the one-party 
system. The mass accumulation of wealth by people who have political power has 
helped transform China from one of the most egalitarian societies in the world 
to one of the most unequal, with a yawning urban-rural wealth gap. 
Because many people believe that wealth flows from access to power more than 
it does from talent or risk-taking, the wealth gap has incited outrage and is 
viewed as at least partly responsible for tens of thousands of mass protests 
around the country in recent years. 
The Central Committee statement did not commit the leadership to specific 
targets in reducing the gap beyond stating that it would need to see improvement 
by the year 2020. 
But analysts say the new platform should result in significant increases in 
government spending on education and health care, which tend to be expensive and 
inaccessible to peasants, migrant workers and retirees, who make up the 
overwhelming majority of China's population. 
Energy efficiency and pollution controls have also become a greater policy 
focus, though experts say there are still few signs that party leaders have the 
resolve to fight pollution at the expense of growth. 
"For most of the past 15 years, the leadership has put G.D.P. growth above 
everything else," said Mao Shoulong, a public policy expert at People's 
University. "Now, they want to make G.D.P. one of a series of social priorities 
that will determine whether or not you get promoted." 
Mr. Mao said President Hu would probably continue to face obstacles in 
putting his plans into effect. Among the problems are that government revenues 
as a share of the total economy remain relatively low. Local officials still 
care far more about generating growth than abstract goals like social equality. 
"China is still a poor country that faces many of the problems of rich 
countries with far more resources," Mr. Mao said. "It is not so easy to change 
the focus of the leadership at this stage of development."