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Chinas
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 Chinas ruling Communist Party to last week become
the nations finance minister.
President Hu Jintao elevated Xie, 59, from his post as head of Chinas
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 Beijings 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 Chinas 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.
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