Huaxi Village in east China's Jiangsu Province, supposedly the
richest village in China, is to train 50,000 village leaders from
all over the country in order to improve their leadership
skills.
According to Sun Haiyan, deputy secretary of Huaxi Village
Communist Party Committee, the programme will start this March.
His village will train 10,000 village leaders from provinces
across the country every year during the 11th Five-Year Plan
(2006-10) in order to share with them Huaxi's experience.
Huaxi, which has been the country's richest village since 2000,
has been designated by the central government as a model
village.
Its experience in economic and cultural development has been
much publicized during the past few years.
"We will pay for all their accommodation and training expenses.
Our sole goal is to help more villages in China develop faster,"
said Sun.
Currently more than 6,000 village leaders have sent in their
applications, according to Sun.
"We will select the proper candidates together with the local
organization bureaux. We will give priority to leaders from western
China and women," Sun said.
Meng Wen'an, the leader of Shayang Village in Jiangsu Province,
is among the 6,000 initial applicants.
Meng has visited Huaxi several times every year since 1999 and
has already implemented several of its policies in his own
village.
"The methods have worked and improved the life of our
villagers," said Meng with excitement. "So I want to learn
more."
According to Sun, the training programme mainly is about Huaxi's
own experience in township enterprise management, village
administration and profit allocation.
Lectures given by experts and discussions among leaders are also
part of the programme.
"Communication is the most important part, so we can benefit
from each other through interaction," said Sun.
He said it was the first time that Huaxi had provided systematic
training to other villager leaders, although it has long been
helping others.
Ever since 1995, Huaxi has sent experienced villagers and
financial support to about 200 poor villages in Heilongjiang
Province, the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region and the Ningxia Hui
Autonomous Region to help facilitate their development, according
to Sun.
With pillar industries such as steel, textiles and tourism,
Huaxi Village generated a total of 30 billion yuan (US$3.6 billion)
in 2005.
The fact that every family lives in a villa, owns at least one
car and people live in harmony has impressed many visitors from
both home and abroad.
The village, covering an area of 0.96 square kilometres, has a
population of 1,520. In 2004, the annual income per capita in Huaxi
was around 120,000 yuan (US$15,000), while the national average
income per farmer was 2,900 yuan (US$362). A city dweller earned on
average 9,400 yuan (US$1,175).
In addition to village leaders, experts are also showing an
interest in Huaxi's training programme.
"It's a good opportunity to bring together village leaders from
all over the country," said Lu Jun, an expert in regional economics
at Peking University.
But Lu warned that other village leaders should not blindly copy
the Huaxi model.
"Huaxi's miracle needs many special conditions, and the model
also has some shortcomings in its election system and enterprise
management.
"Therefore, other villages should choose the methods which are
suitable to their own situations," said Lu.
(China Daily January 16, 2006)