Wednesday, September 05, 2007
Tragedy strikes Royal Park again
Boggles trotting
Cost of living: Glass half empty or full?
JVP to oppose new levies
Govt. probes mounting CEB losses
Too many Sri Lankans living in poverty – Survey
Editorial
NO CONFIDENCE
DO IT FOR PROFITS
Damning COPA report on the way, said to be more damning than COPE
EPDP says no to eastern elections
Jihad story cooked up by Karuna?
Govt. confident of crushing no confidence motion
Sri Lanka has a road map to end conflict – Bogollagama assures EU
Take action on COPE report on Public Property Act – Nihal Sri Ameresekere
Poser to Ranil on his silence on Tax Amnesty Bill Vs hara kiri on $ 500 m Bond
Colombo businesses link up with regional counterparts
Lanka to make debut at Global SMEs 2007 in Malaysia
Seminar on “How to Conduct Business in Today’s Environment”
CEA chief urges biz community to focus on sustainable development
More volunteer experts from Germany
USAID, JE Austin do their part for Sri Lanka
CTC Farmers to plant Maize with Tobacco
Commodity prices will spike higher over next two years
Three Hayleys firms win Presidential Export Awards
Top tea convention begins tomorrow
China way ahead of India in agriculture sector
Kenilworth estate equals an all time record price
Eight junior shuttlers for inaugural Asian c’ships
Wanniarachchi axed for international dual contest
Tec Committee confirms Dilruwan as replacement
Lanka in biggest ever push to woo MICE tourism
Lanka Israel partner to boost tourism
Airbus super jumbo jets through Hong Kong
Brandix opens new-concept Centre of Inspiration for Casualwear
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

China’s new finance minister is former factory worker

BEIJING (AFP) - Starting off as a machine factory worker, Xie Xuren worked his way up through the ranks of China’s ruling Communist Party to last week become the nation’s finance minister.


President Hu Jintao elevated Xie, 59, from his post as head of China’s tax bureau to replace Jin Renqing, the official Xinhua news agency said.His promotion caps a steady career of economic positions during which he earned a reputation as a reliable, rather than inspiring, bureaucrat.
“He is very experienced in the financial system, but there are not many remarkable points in his resume,” said Zhang Xin, a professor of public administration at Beijing’s Renmin University.



“From the resume he seems a rather practical person. He began at a basic level and slowly made his way up.”


However before becoming chief of the State Administration of Taxation in 2003, he served on key Communist Party finance work committees that reported directly to the premier.


“This means that he was deemed very reliable and trustworthy,” Zhang said, adding he was not one of the “princelings” in Chinese politics who can thank their family lineage as much as their qualifications for their senior ranks.


“He is not the child of high-level party cadres.”
Xie also served as vice finance minister from 1995-1998, before heading the China Agricultural Development Bank from 1998-2000, according to a government website biography.


Xie was born in eastern China’s Zhejiang province in October 1947 and graduated in economics from Zhejiang University in 1984 after an earlier career at a machine factory from 1967-1981.


According to the official biography, Xie also boasts engineering credentials from when he served as a worker, technician, machinist and deputy factory head of a Zhejiang machinery plant.