Economy of Liaoning

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Also known as: Fengtien, Liao-ning, Sheng-ching
Wade-Giles romanization:
Liao-ning

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The economy of Liaoning is by far the strongest in the Northeast and is one of the strongest provincial economies in China. Liaoning is one of the country’s principal industrial provinces. One reason for the high level of development in Liaoning is the high level of capitalization, based both on investments made under the government since 1949 and on important foreign investments made between 1896 and 1945, mainly by the Japanese.

Agriculture, forestry, and fishing

Agricultural advances in Liaoning have been less spectacular than industrial development. There are several reasons for this. Investment has always been much heavier in industry than in farming. The province’s inheritance from the Japanese phase was much less valuable in agriculture than in industry. Liaoning also suffers both from natural calamities, such as spring droughts, and from inefficient cultivation methods in many places, which result in lower agricultural yields. Exceptional opportunities for employment in industry also tend to deprive agriculture of much of the best labour, in spite of policies designed to prevent this. Yet, in much of Liaoning, topography and soils and even climate are quite favourable to agriculture, and the degree of farm mechanization, irrigation, and chemical fertilization is high by Chinese standards. Liaoning now exports grain, but it still must import much of its food.

The summer in Liaoning is not long. Few places, consequently, produce two crops per year. The central plain is the best farming area, and the Liaodong Peninsula, with its shorter winter, has a diversified agriculture. Peanuts (groundnuts), sugar beets, and fruit (notably, apples and pears) are among the province’s major crops. Part of the cultivated area is used for industrial crops (primarily cotton and tobacco) or for export crops (such as apples); the rest is used for grain, vegetables, and soybeans. Higher-yielding corn (maize) and rice, formerly grown mainly in the east and southeast, have tended to supplant millet and kaoliang (a variety of grain sorghum) in the plains. The chestnut-leaved oak feeds the tussah silkworm; Liaoning is China’s major producer of tussah silk.

The forests support commercial lumbering, but the supply of mature old-growth trees is limited, due to previous overexploitation, and the output of lumber from these sources is low. However, a vigorous and large-scale reforestation effort has been under way since 1949. More than half of the total wooded areas of the province now consist of these forest plantations, and these support Liaoning’s lumbering industry.

Livestock and poultry raising are increasingly important. Pigs are bred mainly in the south and central parts, and in the west other animals are raised. Fishing in the Yellow Sea and coastal aquaculture, especially sea cucumbers around the Liaodong Bay, are major income-earning activities.

Resources and power

Liaoning province is rich in mineral resources, notably iron ore and coal. Most of the iron ores of Liaoning are concentrated in a triangular area to the south of Shenyang. These ores are generally easy to mine but are of relatively poor quality; ores of better quality occur in the northeastern part of the province. Coal is more widespread, and its distribution partly overlaps that of iron. Coal is exploited in three main areas to the north, east and southeast, and west of Shenyang. Fushun, east of Shenyang, and Fuxin, to the west, have two of the most important collieries in China. Both were exploited under the Japanese but have been expanded since the communists came to power. Apart from its use as fuel and in smelting, coal is used in Liaoning to produce synthetic petroleum. Petroleum is also produced from oil shale, which occurs in the Fushun area and in western Liaoning, generally overlying coal seams. The Liao River oil field, first developed in the late 1960s, has become one of China’s largest onshore producers.

Rich reserves of manganese ore occur in western Liaoning and in the southeast. In the eastern mountain area there are substantial deposits of boron, lead, and zinc; smaller similar deposits occur in the west, together with an important deposit of molybdenum. Important concentrations of magnesite are found around Haicheng, southwest of Shenyang. There are also reserves of other minerals, including bauxite, gold, and diamonds, and sea salt is produced.

Liaoning is a major regional producer of electric power. Much of this is generated by large coal-fired thermal plants in Shenyang, Dalian, and other cities, but a growing proportion consists of hydroelectricity. Liaoning exports some of its production to neighbouring provinces.

Manufacturing

During the mid-1950s considerable capital investment was made in Liaoning, primarily in heavy industry. In heavy industrial production, Liaoning long ranked first among the provinces of China, producing, in addition to pig iron and steel, a substantial part of China’s cement, crude oil, and electrical power. Apart from iron and steel, the industries of Liaoning include nonferrous-metal processing, machinery manufacture, and chemical manufacture, as well as such light industries as those producing textiles, foodstuffs, and paper.

The primary focus of investment in Liaoning had been the industrial network centred on the Anshan iron and steel complex. Prior to the 1980s, Anshan, south of Shenyang, was the industrial heart of Liaoning and was one of China’s principal steel centres; taken as a whole, it was the biggest single enterprise in industrial investment ever established in China up to the expansion of industrial growth after 1980. Shenyang, also a key industrial city, has been granted provincial-level powers in economic planning. It has a wide and varied range of heavy and light industries, notably machinery and electronics. Fushun is part of the Shenyang complex, its industries are based mainly on coal and oil shale. Liaoyang, directly south of Shenyang, is a chemical fibre and textile centre. Dalian, near the tip of the Liaodong Peninsula, is of obvious strategic importance. It has the best harbour in the Northeast and is a major Chinese port. Modern engineering industries have been developed there, including shipbuilding and locomotive production. Dalian also has provincial-level economic authority and is one of China’s coastal cities open to foreign investment. Western Liaoning, centred on Jinzhou, is less advanced than the Shenyang-Anshan area or Dalian, but it has valuable mineral resources and some industries. The new cities of Tieling, in northern Liaoning, and Panjin, at the Liao River delta, have their major industries based on rich local resources of coal and oil, respectively.

Transportation

The rail transportation facilities of Liaoning are among the best in China, and the annual tonnage transported is one of the highest for any province. The railway system is centred in Shenyang, from there extending northeast to Changchun (Jilin) and further to Harbin (Heilongjiang), southeast to Dandong and further to North Korea, south to Dalian, southwest to Shanhaiguan (Hebei) and further to Beijing, and northwest to Tongliao (Inner Mongolia).

Highways in the province are extensive, also with Shenyang as the centre. Shenyang has an extensive system of express highways, and it has been linked to Beijing, Dalian, and Changchun.

Navigation by sea or river carries almost none of the internal traffic of Liaoning, but sea navigation is of great importance for transport to other parts of China and the world. Dalian is the largest port, followed by Yingkou, Huludao, and Donggang.

Government and society

Constitutional framework

From 1950 to 1954 Liaoning, divided into Liaodong and Liaoxi, was under the jurisdiction of the Northeast Administrative Commission. In 1954 the province was reunited, and Liaoning was brought under direct central government rule. After the Cultural Revolution the province subsequently led the national effort to modernize its industrial plants and open its doors to trade with the outside world. Liaoning province is now divided into 14 prefecture-level municipalities (dijishi), and below that level the province is further divided into districts (shixiaqu), counties (xian), autonomous counties (zizhixian), and county-level municipalities (xianjishi).

Education

Liaoning’s economically advanced society has developed significant educational and scientific resources. Coverage of nine-year compulsory education had reportedly reached 100 percent of the population in both urban and rural areas by the early 21st century. There are more than 60 universities, colleges, and other postsecondary educational institutions in the province. Notable ones include Dalian University of Technology (1949) and Dalian Maritime University (1953), both in Dalian, and Northeastern University (1923) in Shenyang. However, nationwide reforms of the education system have resulted in higher costs for tuition, fees, and housing, making it more difficult for people from poorer working-class families to obtain a college education.