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National New-Type Urbanization Plan

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The National New-Type Urbanization Plan is a Chinese government plan to urbanize formerly rural residents in order to help transition China from an export-oriented economy to one with increasing amounts of domestic consumption. The National New-Type Urbanization Plan (2014-2020) was China's first national strategic urbanization plan. A new version for the period 2021-2035 has been prepared, but as of March 2023 was not yet publicized.

National New-Type Urbanization has resulted in more centralized urban planning processes. Investments in infrastructure for newly urbanized residents also had an impact in increasing China's industrialization and GDP.

Overview

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The National New-Type Urbanization Plan was announced in 2014.[1]: 8  The National New-Type Urbanization Plan (2014-2020) was China's first national urbanization plan.[2]: 11  As a strategic policy document, the plan mostly refrained from setting specific quantifiable targets.[2]: 60  A new version of the plan covering the period 2021-2035 has been prepared, but as of March 2023, has not been released.[2]: 11 

The goal of National New-Type Urbanization is to transition China's economic focus from production-for-export to increased domestic consumption.[3]: 17  The Plan's emphasis on developing the domestic consumer economy is explicit.[3]: 116  To do so, China seeks to relocate hundreds of millions of rural Chinese to cities which are being built on a massive scale to accommodate new urban citizens.[3]: 17  The plan seeks to urbanize 250 million rural Chinese by 2026.[3]: 95  The Plan thus reflects an underlying assumption that consumer purchases by urbanites are key to China's continued economic development.[3]: 159 

The 2014 plan sought to attribute an urban hukou to 100 million people by 2020.[4]: 280  It relaxed restrictions on small cities (fewer than 500,000 people) and medium cities (more than 1 million people).[4]: 280  It maintained strong hukou restrictions on cities of more than 5 million inhabitants.[4]: 280 

In addition to urbanizing formerly rural people, the National New-Type Urbanization Plan seeks to optimize urbanization patterns, improve urban sustainability, and promote urban-rural coordination.[1]: 83  To increase urban-rural coordination, the state incorporates rural planning as part of municipal governments' planning processes.[1]: 8  New-type urbanization prioritizes quality of growth over quantity of growth.[2]: 7 

In the logic of the National New-Type Urbanization Plan, approaches to urbanization should advance the Chinese political concept of ecological civilization.[5]: 29  The Plan requires 20% of municipal regions to be zoned as ecological protection areas.[1]: 8 

The National New-Type Urbanization Plan for 2014-2020 also addresses smart cities.[2]: 59–60  It identifies six important aspects for developing smart cities: (1) information network and broadband, (2) digitization of planning management, (3) smart infrastructure, (4) convenience of public services, (5) modernizing industrial development, and (6) sophisticated social governance.[2]: 60 

As of at least 2023, new-type urbanization is a central theme in China's urban planning.[2]: 13  Xiong'an is being developed as an exemplar of the Chinese model of new-type urbanization.[2]: 159 

Impact

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Prior to the National New-Type Urbanization Plan, development planning processes were more decentralized.[1]: 87  The methods of planning it requires now coordinate planning processes that were previously separate and spread across separate bureaucracies dealing with urban and land planning, economic planning, environmental planning, and tourist planning.[1]: 87 

The state investment in infrastructure for newly urbanized residents, as well as their concentration in urban areas, has increased China's industrialization and gross domestic product.[3]: 95 

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f Rodenbiker, Jesse (2023). Ecological States: Politics of Science and Nature in Urbanizing China. Environments of East Asia series. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-1-5017-6900-9.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Hu, Richard (2023). Reinventing the Chinese City. New York, NY: Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-21101-7.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Simpson, Tim (2023). Betting on Macau: Casino Capitalism and China's Consumer Revolution. Globalization and Community series. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press. ISBN 978-1-5179-0031-1.
  4. ^ a b c Froissart, Chloé (2024). "Adapting the Hukou to Modernise the Country While Maintaining Social Polarisation and Stratification". In Doyon, Jérôme; Froissart, Chloé (eds.). The Chinese Communist Party: a 100-Year Trajectory. Canberra: ANU Press. ISBN 9781760466244.
  5. ^ Qi, Ye; Song, Qijao; Zhao, Xiofan; Qiu, Shiyong; Lindsay, Tom (2020). "China's New Urbanisation Plan" (PDF). Coalition for Urban Transitions.