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March 26, 2013

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More new top leaders schooled in liberal arts than sciences

CHINA'S central authority recently appointed new Communist Party of China chiefs for seven provinces and autonomous regions, largely concluding the country's leadership transitions at the central and local levels.

One noticeable change involves the leaders' educational backgrounds. Compared with previous generations of leaders, a larger portion of the new leaders holds degrees in liberal arts instead of engineering.

Observers believe the change will respond to the contemporary need to shift government functions from management to providing services.

New Party chiefs have recently been appointed for the provinces of Hebei, Heilongjiang, Jiangxi, Henan, Hunan and Qinghai, as well as the Ningxia Hui Autonomous Region.

Last November, a new CPC leadership came to power at the CPC's 18th National Congress. It was followed by a new generation of leadership that was unveiled for state organs and the country's top political advisory body at the recently concluded sessions of the national legislature and political advisory body.

President Xi Jinping graduated from Tsinghua University with a doctoral degree in law, while Premier Li Keqiang earned a bachelor's degree in law and a doctorate in economics at Peking University.

In comparison, their predecessors were more likely to have studied engineering, hydraulics and geology.

Among the 33 members of the State Council, or China's cabinet, eight majored in science and engineering, 10 in political science and economics and the remaining 15 in humanities, such as literature, history and philosophy.

Service-oriented

The educational backgrounds of local CPC and government heads also reflect a similar trend. For instance, Guo Gengmao, the new secretary of the CPC Henan Provincial Committee, studied in Peking University's Department of International Politics. Lu Hao, who has been transferred from the post of first secretary of the Communist Youth League Central Committee to deputy CPC chief of Heilongjiang Province, earned a master's degree in economics at Peking University.

As China emphasizes a service-oriented government, an increasing number of people schooled in law, history and philosophy will hold important local offices, said Wang Yukai, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Governance.

The trend, which has already prevailed in developed countries, is the result of a need to transform government functions and innovate in social management, Wang said.

In the 205-seat 18th CPC Central Committee, which was elected at the CPC congress last November, only 21 members with a bachelor's degree or above were schooled in science and engineering, while the others majored in humanities, law or a combination of humanities and science.

Many of the newly installed CPC and government leaders have academic backgrounds that will aid the country's socioeconomic development, said Professor Dai Yanjun from the Party School of the CPC Central Committee. Officials with liberal arts education will be better able to tackle social issues that crop up in the course of China's economic progress, Dai said.

In academics, debates have existed for some time over whether engineering or liberal arts educations can create better leaders. For Wu Jiang, president of the Chinese Academy of Personnel Science, neither is better. He said it is only a matter of which background can best adapt to the country's current phase of development.

Post-industrial age

More humanities-trained professionals are replacing engineers as CPC and government heads, which is natural as China moves on to the post-industrial stage, he explained.

In the previous industrial stage, engineers were in great demand in all sectors of society, with some gradually transferred from engineering and technical posts to managerial and leadership posts.

However, in the post-industrial stage, society is in need of more economic, managerial and legal professionals, according to Wu. More humanities-educated professionals are assuming leadership positions, which indicates that soft science is playing a bigger role in state and social administration, he said.





 

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