Economy of Guangxi

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Also known as: Guangxi Zhuangzu Zizhiqu, Kuang-hsi Chuang-tsu Tzu-chih-ch’ü, Zhuang Autonomous Region of Guangxi
In full:
Zhuang Autonomous Region of Guangxi
Chinese (Pinyin):
Guangxi Zhuangzu Zizhiqu or
(Wade-Giles romanization):
Kuang-hsi Chuang-tsu Tzu-chih-ch’ü

Since 1949 the region has made considerable progress in its economic development. Dams, canals, and reservoirs have been built to help irrigate dry lands; hydroelectric stations have been constructed and mineral resources exploited to stimulate modern industry; and rural industries have been developed in an effort to diversify village economy. Guangxi has become self-sufficient in rice and, in fact, exports surplus rice to Guangdong. The Beibu Gulf Economic Zone was established in 2006 to promote international participation in developing the Gulf of Tonkin coastal region.

Resources and power

The region has some coal and iron deposits to support moderate industrial development. Coal is mined north of Guilin and south of Liuzhou, and around Bise in the west. Iron is mined in the area near the Guangdong-Hunan border as well as in southeastern Guangxi. Other exploited mineral resources include tin (of which Guangxi is a major producer), tungsten, manganese, and antimony. Moderate amounts of bismuth, zinc, hafnium, and lead are also produced.

Among Guangxi’s variety of biological resources, timber reserves are the most valuable and exploited. The region also has tremendous hydroelectric potential, and a number of facilities have been installed. One large hydroelectric facility, the Longtan station, was completed in 2008 on the Hongshui River in northwestern Guangxi. Power is also generated at thermal plants. The use of biogas (fuel gas generated from human and animal waste) has become widespread for domestic consumption.

Agriculture, forestry, and fishing

Only small areas of the region are under cultivation. Agriculture is concentrated in the river valleys and on the limestone plains. The hillsides are terraced wherever feasible. Since the 1950s the government has been bringing new land under cultivation and has increased the yield of already cultivated areas by the use of irrigation and tractors. Major food crops include rice, corn (maize), wheat, and sweet potatoes. The leading commercial crop is sugarcane; other important commercial crops include peanuts (groundnuts), sesame, ramie (China grass), tobacco, tea, cotton, and indigo. Guangxi is also a rich producer of a wide variety of fruits. The raising of livestock in Guangxi is ancillary to farming. Water buffaloes are used as draft animals in the paddy fields, though, with the advent of mechanization, to a lesser degree. Pigs, chickens, and ducks are raised on farms, and goats are raised in the hills. In many areas silkworms are also raised.

Guangxi is an important producer of timber and forest products. In the north, large quantities of pine, fir, cedar, and giant bamboo are exploited. Red and black sandalwood are also produced in the west. More important, however, are sandarac (a resin used in making varnish and incense), star anise (Chinese anise), cassia bark (Chinese cinnamon), nutgall (a swelling on oak trees that produces tannin), and camphor. Tung oil, tea oil, and fennel oil are also produced. Some of these and other products are important ingredients in traditional Chinese medicine.

Fishing is extensive. Both inshore and deep-sea fishing are carried on in the Gulf of Tonkin, which contains some of the world’s richest fishing grounds. Catches include croaker (a fish that makes a croaking noise), herring, squid, prawns, eels, perch, mackerel, sharks, and sturgeon. The catching of fish fry in the region’s many streams for use in aquaculture is characteristic of the freshwater fishing sector. Fish culture and the production of silkworms are complementary: the waste cocoons of silkworms are fed to the fish, and mud from fishponds is used as fertilizer for the mulberry bushes on which the silkworms feed. Pearl farming in the Hepu area near the coast of the Gulf of Tonkin is famous for its “southern pearls.”

Manufacturing and services

Light industries produce textiles, paper, flour, silk, leather, matches, chemicals, and pharmaceuticals as well as sandarac gum, sugar, dyestuffs, and oils and fats. Pine resin is a particularly notable export of Wuzhou. Heavy industries include the ironworks and steelworks at Liuzhou, Hechi, and Luzhai, machinery production at Nanning and Wuzhou, and the cement works at Liuzhou. The numerous handicraft products made in the region include cotton and ramie cloths, bamboo paper and rice paper, and bamboo combs. Since the 1980s several industries in the province experienced quick development, including plants making automobiles, heavy diesel engines, and chemical fertilizers.

Tourism, especially oriented toward the city of Guilin, increased sharply in the 1980s and has become a significant source of income for the region. The distinctive and picturesque karst topography near Guilin is one of China’s most popular tourist destinations.

Transportation

Guangxi’s elaborate system of waterways provides transportation throughout almost all of the region. A large proportion of the traffic is by junk, although portions of many rivers are navigable by motor launches and even by small steamers. With the completion of some river course improvement projects, 1,000-ton steamboats could travel from Nanning to Guangzhou in neighbouring Guangdong province in the early 2000s.

The Hunan-Guangxi railroad runs diagonally across the region from the northeast to the southwest. It forms a vital continental artery that connects with the Beijing-Guangzhou railroad and, south of Pingxiang, with the Vietnamese railroad system. A branchline runs from Litang to the port city of Zhanjiang in Guangdong province. The Guangxi-Guizhou railroad links Liuzhou with Guiyang (Guizhou province) and, along with the Liuzhou-Zhicheng line (opened 1978), has been an impetus to the development of northern Guangxi. A newer rail line, completed in 1997, connects Kunming (Yunnan province) with Nanning and with Beihai on the Gulf of Tonkin coast, providing for the southwestern provinces a more direct route to that seaport.

The highway system has been substantially extended and improved since 1949. The highway network forms a central rectangle—with Nandan (in the northwest), Liuzhou, Nanning, and Baise (in the west) at its four corners—from which other roads radiate. The Guilin-Beihai express highway, bisecting Guangxi from north to south, was opened in 2000. Express highways from Nanning northeast to Liuzhou, south to Fangchenggang, and southwest to Youyiguan on the border with Vietnam were also opened for traffic in the early 21st century. Air traffic, centred on Nanning, Liuzhou, and Guilin, is largely with other Chinese cities, with some flights to regional foreign destinations.

Government and society

Constitutional framework

The region’s administration is organized in a series of hierarchical levels. The top is the autonomous regional level, directly under the central government in Beijing. At the second level there are 14 prefecture-level municipalities (dijishi). Below these are districts (shixiaqu), county-level municipalities (xianjishi), counties (xian), and autonomous counties (zizhixian).

Health and welfare

Since the 1950s Guangxi has made significant progress in public health and medicine. Such formerly widespread diseases as malaria, smallpox, measles, and schistosomiasis (a parasitic infestation of the bladder or intestines) have been brought under control. The addition of iodine to water has ended the once-frequent occurrences of goitre, and the liver fluke disease has been overcome by filling in old canals that were sources of infection and digging new ones. There is also a mass program to combat leprosy. Traditional Chinese medicine has been promoted to compensate for the shortage of Western medicine.

A basic social welfare system is available. Welfare funds guarantee care for the sick, disabled, and aged and provide relief in times of drought or flood. For industrial workers there are accident prevention and insurance programs that provide for hospital treatment, sick leave, disability compensation, maternity leave, old-age benefits, and death benefits. Supplementary benefits are offered to those who participate in government programs such as birth control. The government improved housing, expanded recreational facilities, and provided public health centres. However, government reforms since 1990 have made it more difficult for many citizens to get affordable housing and health care.

Education

A special educational feature in Guangxi is the program for the education of national minorities. Minority languages are used for instruction in primary and middle schools, written scripts (such as that for the Zhuang language) are developed for spoken minority languages wherever needed, minority teachers are trained, and government subsidies are provided for minority students. Instruction in the Zhuang language is offered where the size of the Zhuang population warrants it. The Institute for Minorities in Nanning trains both intellectuals and technical specialists of minority descent to work among the minority peoples below the county level. Institutions of higher education include Guangxi University at Nanning and Guangxi Normal University at Guilin, as well as Guangxi Medical University and the Guangxi Traditional Chinese Medical University, both also at Nanning. The Museum of Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region and the Library of the Region are located in Nanning as well.

Cultural life

In Guangxi, Chinese culture is clearly predominant. Because the minorities in Guangxi possess neither a unified organization nor support by fraternal groups, their assimilation by the Chinese is far more advanced than in the other autonomous regions. The underlying causes of what appear to be the region’s ethnic tensions are economic and geographic factors that have exerted a powerful influence on cultural trends.