Accelerating the development of the eastern region will help increase our 
national strength and competitiveness, as well as support and stimulate the 
development of the other regions. The eastern region needs to lead the nation in 
optimizing the economic structure, deepening institutional reforms and changing 
the pattern of growth. It should pay more attention to raising the overall 
quality of its economy and increasing its competitiveness in the international 
market, and develop a more globally oriented economy. In addition, the region 
should better balance urban and rural development as well as economic and social 
development, and strengthen efforts to protect arable land, economize on 
resources and improve the natural environment. It should also support the 
development of the central and western regions. 
We will adopt even more effective measures to support old revolutionary base 
areas, ethnic minority areas, border areas and underdeveloped areas to 
accelerate their economic and social development.
IV. Vigorously Promoting Economic Restructuring and Opening 
Up 
We will work even harder this year to advance economic restructuring. In 
particular, we will strive to make further breakthroughs in some major areas and 
key links.
1. Continuing rural reforms. The reform of rural taxes and administrative 
charges constitutes a profound transformation of the rural economic and social 
framework. We will exempt the agricultural tax and eliminate all unreasonable 
financial burdens on farmers, a complete reversal of the practice of farmers 
paying grain tax to the government for working the land that has lasted more 
than two millennia. Attaining this goal is only the first step in our reform of 
rural taxes and administrative charges. We still need to work harder, and we 
have a long way to go to solidify what we have achieved in this reform. We will 
resolve new conflicts and problems as soon as they arise in the reform, 
concentrating on the supporting reforms of government institutions at the town 
and township level, the rural compulsory education system, and the financial 
management system for counties and townships. This will be a more important, 
complicated and arduous task. In addition, we need to deepen the reform of the 
grain distribution system, rural financial reforms, and the reform of the rural 
land management system. 
2. Deepening the reform of state-owned enterprises. This reform continues to 
be the central link in economic restructuring, and it must proceed unwaveringly 
in accordance with the principles and policies set by the Central Committee and 
the State Council. First, we will continue to strategically readjust the 
distribution and structure of the state-owned sector of the economy and improve 
the mechanism for ensuring rational distribution of state funds by increasing 
investment in some areas and pulling it out of others. We will energetically 
develop large companies and large enterprise groups that own intellectual 
property rights, have name brand products and are internationally competitive. 
Second, we will speed up the transformation of large state-owned enterprises 
into stock companies. We will improve corporate governance and change the 
operational mechanisms of enterprises to meet the requirements for a modern 
enterprise system. We will institute a system for annually assigning 
responsibility for enterprise performance and a system for holding enterprise 
executives responsible for their work during their terms of service. We will 
standardize the system of benefit packages for these executives. Third, the 
process of relieving state-owned enterprises of the obligation to operate social 
programs will be accelerated. We will continue to carry out policy-based 
closures and bankruptcy proceedings for enterprises, and a legal mechanism will 
be established for declaring them bankrupt. Fourth, we will deepen reform of the 
power, telecommunications and civil aviation industries and continue reform of 
the postal and railway systems and urban public utilities by liberalizing market 
access and instituting competitive mechanisms. We will improve the management 
system and the methods of oversight for state assets and institute a budget 
system for the use of state capital. We will standardize the procedures for 
transforming state-owned enterprises and for transferring state equity to 
prevent erosion of state assets and protect the legitimate rights and interests 
of employees. We will deepen the reform of collectively owned enterprises and 
promote the development of a diversified collective sector of the economy. 
3. Encouraging, supporting and guiding the development of the non-public 
sector of the economy. We will conscientiously implement the State Council's 
Guidelines for Encouraging, Supporting and Guiding the Development of the 
Non-Public Sector of the Economy, Including Self-Employed Workers and Private 
Companies, so as to create a legal, policy and market environment that ensures 
fair competition for all non-public enterprises. More industries and fields will 
be opened to non-public capital, and financing channels for non-public 
enterprises will be widened. Private property and the rights and interests of 
these enterprises will be protected in accordance with the law. These 
enterprises will be better served and supervised. They need to improve their 
quality, and they must abide by laws, regulations and policies of the state, 
conform to regulations for industrial safety and environmental protection, and 
guarantee the legitimate rights and interests of their employees.