Economic Growth in China

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Driving Forces Template From OpenScenarios Here is a template to upload driving forces.

Table of contents:

1 Description:

2 Enablers:

3 Inhibitors:

4 Paradigms:

5 Experts:

6 Timing:

7 Web Resources:

Description:

Since China's open-door policy was initiated in late 1978, there has been rapid increase in the numbers of foreign investors and foreign capital flows to China. The growing trend of foreign investment has been magnified by the improvement of economic circumstances and market-oriented economic development.

Enablers:

China's Internet community has multiplied 128 times in a little more than six years, new statistics show.

There are now about 80 million netizens in the country, a drastic jump from the 620,000 users recorded in 1997, the China Internet Network Information Centre (CNNIC)'s latest report shows. The number grew to 79.5 million by the end of December 2003.

About 11.5 million new users were recorded in the second half of last year, a growth higher than the 8.9 million recorded in the first six months of 2003. Although large in size, the current number is only 6.2 percent of the country's total population.

Inhibitors:

The Internet in China is filtered. Chinese citizens know about filtering only through gossip, or when they discover that certain sensitive Web sites are consistently reported to be unavailable on the otherwise-functioning network. Related research done by Harvard Business School found a range of sites covering dozens of topical categories to be filtered, including dissident and democracy sites, sites covering public health and HIV, sites about religion, Tibet, Taiwan and the home pages of many institutions of higher learning around the world. Within this broad range, apart from pornography, are sites involving news. China regularly blocks the online sites of BBC, CNN, Times, PBS, The Miami Herald, and The Philadelphia Inquirer. However this restrictive attitude does not seem as a big threat over the growth of internet in China. A number of hackers had already entered the cat-and-mouse game of helping users bypass government Internet filters through proxy services.

Paradigms:

Experts: Sources for additional information about this driving force. (if you have found people, put the links to them)

Timing: Dates for key milestones in the development of the driving force.

Web Resources:

China Unicom to open 3,000 Internet cafes- World IT Report 2004