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The
China Project Management Government Forum co-sponsored by
China and the US in Beijing in 2007.
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China's
first group of 240 students on the Master of Public Administration
Program are public servants from Beijing, Tianjin, Henan
and other localities.
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The
"Harvard Project" signing ceremony.
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IN January 2002, representatives from the Development and Research
Center of the State Council, John F. Kennedy School of Government
(KSG) of Harvard University and the School of Public Policy and
Management of Tsinghua University signed a public administration
advanced training agreement, initiating what is publicly known
as the Harvard Project, at the Great Hall of the People.
In the five years since, 300 high-ranking officials from Chinese
ministries, commissions and provincial governments have undergone
three-month-long KSG training courses. Their work comprises delving
into case histories of different countries in order to find Chinese
solutions to public administration. The Organization Department
of the CPC Central Committee considers the Harvard Project as
one of the most important government officials overseas training
programs ever.
Similar training projects are also underway in British, German,
Danish, Singaporean and other American universities. Local governments,
in addition to the CPC Organization Department, have also become
increasingly active sponsors of overseas training projects.
Learning from the US
Overseas training for Chinese officials started in 1983, with
Deng Xiaopings proposal to introduce foreign administration
to facilitate the four modernizations. Back then, however,
such training programs were little more than symbolic measures
of reform and opening-up, as appraised by an official from
the Ministry of Personnel. Julian Chang, executive director of
the KSG Asia Programs, also points out, Though KSG saw Chinese
faces as early as the mid-1980s, there were no large-scale, well-organized
Chinese programs until 1996.
And it was not until 2000, when the Personnel Ministry discovered
that short inspection tours were insufficient to solve Chinas
administrative problems, that the Chinese public actually became
aware of large-scale overseas training programs for officials.
Training programs ranged from brief inspection tours to courses
lasting three months to one year. These courses were primarily
designed for economic officials, and were later expanded to include
public administrators. American universities, meanwhile, were
the most favored study destinations. Certain Chinese media pointed
out that the Chinese government actions in this respect conveyed
a clear message to the international community that it was remolding
itself into a learning government.
Lu Mai, secretary general of the China Development Research Foundation,
regards the Harvard Project as imperative. Since
China joined the WTO, Chinese officials need to adopt a modern
administrative mindset and be conversant in contemporary game
rules and practices.
But why, many might ask, should China learn from the US? Zhang
Guoqing, a research fellow of the Institute of American Studies
under the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, explains, As
the worlds most developed country, the US writes and controls
many of the game rules.
This reasoning also prevails in local government. In 2006 several
hundred medium- and high-ranking officials from Hunan, Henan,
Shandong and Guangdong went to Harvard University and San Jose
State University to study international economy and trade and
public administration for three to six months. In recent years,
the majority of local governments have initiated similar programs.
Medium- and long-term training is generally takes place in economically
developed countries, such as the US, Britain and Singapore, according
to Peng Hao, head of the Administrative Office of the Overseas
Training Department under the State Administration of Foreign
Experts Affairs. As he explains, The study destination is
chosen according to the aspect of training in question. Singapore,
for example, is acknowledged worldwide for its successful housing
reforms, which is why related training programs take place there.
It is generally believed that Singapore is the model for China
most favored by the central government, because its concept of
governance is closest to China. The political systems and experience
of European and American countries, as might be expected, differ
greatly from those of China. Wu Wei, vice dean of the School of
Humanities and Social Sciences at Singapores Nanyang Technological
University (NTU), is involved in the China program. He elaborates,
No Western experience can compare with Singapores
as regards achieving high-speed economic development, clean government
and social stability during an extended period of single party
rule. This is the main reason why the CPC leadership so values
its Singapore training projects. NTU has been running a
Master's Program in Managerial Economics, taught in Chinese, aimed
at potential mayors on Chinas mainland since 1998, and has
since graduated around 400 prefectural- and bureau-level officials.
Pu Xingzu, professor of International Relations and Public Affairs
at Fudan University, believes that looking beyond Europe and the
US for more diversified expertise will help the Chinese government
broaden its administration and governance perspectives.
The Decision to Transform Government
China currently sends officials for training to more than 30
countries and regions, including the United States, Germany, Britain,
Canada and Singapore. Training program content is adjusted and
coordinated by the Administrative Office of the Overseas Training
Department according to the situation of destination countries,
according to statistics from the Overseas Training Department
of the State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs.
Zhang Guoqing, a professor at the School of Government of Peking
University, regards the central and local governments official
training programs as an important supplement to the Chinese
governments human resource development strategy of a new
age. He points out, The Chinese government must transform
its administrative mode from that of a planned economy to a service-oriented
government that accords with the market economy and competently
meets the challenges of globalization. Training officials, therefore,
is an essential strategic decision, and will have significant
impact on Chinas future modes of administration and economic
development.
Chinese officials generally have a professional background, such
as engineering and certain industry, which gives them an advantage,
in the opinion of Lu Mai. The public administration skills that
they lack are supplemented by the training that they subsequently
put into practice.
The central government expects to maximize the effect of overseas
training in ways that will benefit more officials. A summary report,
therefore, is mandatory homework for every returned official.
Harvard Project student case studies are compiled into volumes
that are used as teaching material at Tsinghua University and
other domestic training programs for Chinese officials.
China currently sends around 40,000 officials overseas for training
each year, according to the Overseas Training Department of the
State Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs statistics. Although
workable assessment criteria on the effectiveness of overseas
training programs have yet to be set up, Chinese government at
various levels is agreed on the profound intangible effect of
these programs.
As overseas training is costly, and many continue to express
doubts as to its efficacy, the Chinese government selects its
candidates with extreme care. Taking the Harvard Project as an
example, candidates are required to have a bachelor degree and
proficiency in English equivalent to University English Level
Four or higher. Officials at and above the prefectural/bureau
level must have work experience of no less than two years at their
current post; and be no older than 45. The age restriction is
relaxed for officials above the vice provincial/ministerial level.
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