China must focus on economic growth and social stability in the face of a global slump, President Hu Jintao said on Thursday, vowing a stronger state role in steering market reforms.
In a speech celebrating 30 years of reform policies, Hu also said his government's efforts to counter the global economic downturn were working and he renewed his promise to create a more equal and "harmonious society".
But pride of place in Hu's address to ranks of officials in the cavernous Great Hall of the People was the insistent message that growth and Party control came before all else.
"Only development makes hard sense," Hu said more than once, reviving a slogan the late reformist leader Deng Xiaoping used to spur on investment and spending.
"Making economic development the focus is the key to national rejuvenation and it is the fundamental imperative for our Party and our country achieving prosperity and development and enduring peace and stability."
Hu's speech celebrated China's success since 1978, when a Party leadership meeting agreed to focus on economic development after decades of turmoil and isolation under Mao.
But the keynote address was also a peptalk for a country under strain from the global economic downturn that has abruptly slowed growth and lifted joblessness, as export-driven factories either curtail production or shut down.
Exports shrank 2.2 percent from their year-earlier level in November, the first monthly fall in many years, underlining the danger of increasing social instability, a primary concern of the Communist leadership.
Hu said China had "achieved positive results in responding to the international financial crisis", but also that the country needed to continue its difficult balance of market reforms and top-down political control.
"We must earnestly implement various measures to further boost domestic demand and promote economic growth, properly address the global financial crisis and other risks from the international economic world, and do our best to keep relatively fast and stable growth," Hu said.
China is worried that the thousands of factories shutting or laying off workers, especially along the export-dependent coast, could lead to unrest if the unemployed hit the streets.
NO TO WESTERN POLITICAL SYSTEM
While stressing that officials must back market reforms and the private economy, Hu dwelt on the need for greater state control. China must "focus on strengthening and improving the state's macro-economic controls and overcoming certain shortcomings in the market itself", he said.
But Hu also said the country owed three decades of growth to Deng's reforms that tore down the rigid controls of Mao Zedong's time, opening the economy to private and foreign investment.
His theme of carefully controlled change under the Communist Party extended to politics, where he said officials must heed the needs of citizens but rejected any notion of Western-style democratic liberalisation.
"We must draw on the beneficial fruits of humankind's political civilisation, but we will never copy the model of the Western political system," Hu said in a speech loaded with Party slogans and salutes to past leaders.
China is already grappling with a surge in popular discontent, caused by corruption, a growing rich/poor divide, illegal land grabs and other contentious issues.
"We must be clearly aware that development is of overriding importance and stability is our overriding task; if there is no stability, then nothing can be achieved, and what achievements we have made will be lost," he said.
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