thumb|Propaganda banner in the [[Zhuang language in Qixing District mentioning "harmonious development towards Xiaokang."]]

Moderately prosperous society or Xiaokang society (), is a Chinese term, originally of Confucianism, used to describe a society composed of a functional middle-class. In December 1979, Deng Xiaoping, then paramount leader of China, first proposed the idea of "Xiaokang" based on the "Four Modernizations". Jiang Zemin, General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party between 1989 and 2002, expanded the concept to include more goals, and coined the term "comprehensively building a moderately prosperous society", which would be completed by 2020. CCP General Secretary Hu Jintao referred to economic policies intended to realize a more equal distribution of wealth. In the usages (Tifa) of current General Secretary Xi Jinping, the term Chinese Dream has gained somewhat greater prominence. In 2015, Xi unveiled a set of political slogans called the Four Comprehensives, which include "Comprehensively build a moderately prosperous society." At the 100th anniversary of the Chinese Communist Party on 1 July 2021, Xi Jinping declared that China achieved its goal of building a moderately prosperous society.

History

It has been loosely translated as a "basically well-off" society in which the people are able to live relatively comfortably, albeit ordinarily. The term was first used in Classic of Poetry written as early as 3,000 years ago. Xiaokang also appears in the Book of Rites. In it, Confucius writes of a Great Unity society, where "the world was shared by all alike. The worthy and the able were promoted to office and men practiced good faith and lived in affection. Therefore they did not regard as parents only their own parents, or as sons only their own sons". He compared this with xiaokang societies, which the rules of the times, though well-ordered, governed by ritual, and relatively prosperous, did not attain the same amount of harmony and moral excellence as the past.

Deng Xiaoping described a xiaokang society as a goal of the Four Modernizations.

  1. no rural resident to live below the rural poverty line of ¥4,000;
  2. the growth rate of the per capita disposable income of residents of poor rural areas to exceed that of the national average; and
  3. the main basic public services in poor rural areas come close to the national average.

Accordingly, Xi launched the battle against poverty campaign in October 2015.

Modern political discourse

The vision of a xiaokang society is one in which most people are moderately well off and middle class, and in which economic prosperity is sufficient to move most of the population in mainland China into comfortable means, but in which economic advancement is not the sole focus of society. Explicitly incorporated into the concept of a Xiaokang society is the idea that economic growth needs to be balanced with sometimes conflicting goals of social equality and environmental protection. Xiaokang is also a name for a semi-monthly magazine that is affiliated to the Qiushi Magazine, the party-run magazine in Beijing. Started in 2004, it mainly focuses on the political and economic development in China.

Tibet

Chinese state media has used the term "Xiaokang villages" to describe structures built by the People's Liberation Army near the Line of Actual Control in its ongoing border dispute with India.

See also

  • Buddhist economics
  • Harmonious Society
  • Real socialism
  • Sufficiency economy

References