Economic Developments in Mainland China: Hearings, Ninety-second Congress, Second Session. June 13, 14, and 15, 1972U.S. Government Printing Office, 1972 - 148페이지 |
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25개의 결과 중 1 - 5개
15 페이지
... policy , helpful but not a necessity . Chinese trade at times has been to particular countries for strictly political reasons , and I gures in my prepared statement regarding its trade in 1971 , As I said , China has been forced to trade.
... policy , helpful but not a necessity . Chinese trade at times has been to particular countries for strictly political reasons , and I gures in my prepared statement regarding its trade in 1971 , As I said , China has been forced to trade.
18 페이지
... reasons for them . And if the United States were able to maintain its present share of the world market in the goods I have cited- that is , machinery , minerals , machinery and equipment , and chemi- cals - American exports to China ...
... reasons for them . And if the United States were able to maintain its present share of the world market in the goods I have cited- that is , machinery , minerals , machinery and equipment , and chemi- cals - American exports to China ...
19 페이지
... reasons . percent of China's $ 4.6 billion trade in 1971 ( imports , $ 2.2 billion ; 4 billion ) was with free - world countries , with whom it has maintained ed annual balance - of - trade surplus of $ 100- $ 250 million for the past ...
... reasons . percent of China's $ 4.6 billion trade in 1971 ( imports , $ 2.2 billion ; 4 billion ) was with free - world countries , with whom it has maintained ed annual balance - of - trade surplus of $ 100- $ 250 million for the past ...
22 페이지
... reasons perhaps . It is something which could be held out but , as Senator Mansfield has made clear , there can be no ... reason is to continue a closer communication because the more interweaving we have the more the webbing grows of ...
... reasons perhaps . It is something which could be held out but , as Senator Mansfield has made clear , there can be no ... reason is to continue a closer communication because the more interweaving we have the more the webbing grows of ...
23 페이지
... reasons for the big disruptions they had of the 1960's that slowed them down . any feeling about this kind of thing - remember the Red t with the students and so forth , and with some of the d others who wanted to move in a more ...
... reasons for the big disruptions they had of the 1960's that slowed them down . any feeling about this kind of thing - remember the Red t with the students and so forth , and with some of the d others who wanted to move in a more ...
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achievements agricultural allocation American areas Asia Asian Assessment attack basic basis BOGGS border capability capita Chairman PROXMIRE Chinese economy Chinese Mainland Chou En-lai cities clothing Colonel FRASER CONGRESS THE LIBRARY consumption countries countryside cultural revolution defense DORRILL economic emphasis estimates exports forces foreign going gross national product growth HINTON ideology important improvement industrial investment Japan KALLGREN kind Korea labor LATTIMORE leadership LIBRARY OF CONGRESS limited Mainland China major military million nator FULBRIGHT Nixon Nixon doctrine nuclear organization Peking People's Republic percent political population possible potential prepared statement problems Professor question Republic of China resident committee rman PROXMIRE Russians Schwartz seems Senator FULBRIGHT Senator Mansfield Senator Scott social society Soviet Union strategy Taiwan things threat U.S. dollars United urban Vietnam Vietnam war weapons welfare
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143 페이지 - ... beneficial. Each side undertakes to facilitate the further development of such contacts and exchanges. Both sides view bilateral trade as another area from which mutual benefit can be derived, and agreed that economic relations based on equality and mutual benefit are in the interest of the peoples of the two countries. They agree to facilitate the progressive development of trade between their two countries.
75 페이지 - ... with ragged peasants, they attribute the fantastically fast city growth to rural-urban migration. Actually this migration now does little more than make up for the small difference in the birth rate between city and countryside. In the history of the industrial nations, as we have seen, the sizable difference between urban and rural birth rates and death rates required that cities, if they were to grow, had to have an enormous influx of people from farms and villages. Today in the underdeveloped...
77 페이지 - ... that the inhabitants of communities both large and small can do much more to help themselves than is customarily recognized. If the small towns and villages of India and elsewhere wait for their central governments to install public water supplies, most of them will wait indefinitely. It is surprising how much can be accomplished with local labor and local materials, and the benefits in health are incalculable. In the larger cities, where self-help is not feasible, municipal water systems can...
148 페이지 - ... the Five Principles of mutual respect for territorial integrity and sovereignty, mutual non-aggression, noninterference in each other's internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit, and peaceful coexistence, and to oppose the imperialist policies of aggression and war.
75 페이지 - ... The course of urban evolution can be correctly interpreted only in relation to the parallel evolution of technology and social organization (especially political organization); these are not just prerequisites to urban life but the basis for its development. As centers of innovation cities provided a fertile setting for continued technological advances; these gains made possible the further expansion of cities. Advanced technology in turn depended on the increasingly complex division of labor,...
29 페이지 - ... standard, but a nuclear and missile program produced successful results in recent years when the economy as a whole was still experiencing difficulties. One must not be misled by the low per capita productivity on the Chinese Mainland to a feeling of complacency regarding her technical capabilties in certain narrowly defined spheres. At the same time, it is equally erroneous to consider the achievement in a specialized field as an indicator of the degree of development of the economy as a whole.
19 페이지 - Foreign trade is a state monopoly, controlled by the Ministry of Foreign Trade. It is conducted exclusively through a network of corporations in accordance with priorities established considerably in advance through the country's economic plan.
75 페이지 - I shall be concerned therefore with three metabolic problems that have become more acute as cities have grown larger and whose solution rests almost entirely in the hands of the local administrator. Although he can call on many outside sources for advice, he must ultimately provide solutions fashioned to the unique needs of his own community. These three problems are the provision of an adequate water supply, the effective disposal of sewage and the control of air pollution.
75 페이지 - During the 19th century the urbanizing nations were learning how to keep crowded populations in cities from dying like flies. Now the lesson has been learned, and it is being applied to cities even in countries just emerging from tribalism. In fact, a disproportionate share of public health funds goes into cities. As a result throughout the nonindustrial world people in cities are multiplying as never before, and rural-urban migration is playing a much lesser...
15 페이지 - ... of imports or as a market for its exports. Development of foreign trade and economic relations with most nations of the world is an important part of China's present policy to maximize the potential contribution of foreign trade to economic development. China now has trading relations with over 150 countries. A desire to finance its imports with export earnings has resulted in an effort to balance trade with the rest of the world. However, China trades on a multilateral basis and does not insist...