On the morning of September 28th, 2011, Professor Liu Jisen, deputy secretary general of Guangdong Research Institute for International Strategies and Professor Li Yongning, director of editorial department of "Studies on Strategic Decisions" and chief editor of "Trends of the International Affairs" attended the third "Lecture of Guangzhou Political Consultative Conference" at invitation in the Committee Conference Hall of the Office Building of Guangzhou Political Consultative Conference. The Lecture also invited Li Yining to present a special report on "the 12th Five-year Plan and China's Economic Operation-- on the Hot Issues in Current Economy". Professor Li Yining is the deputy director of CPPCC Economic Committee, director of Social Science Department of Peking University, Honorary President of the Peking University Guanghua School of management and doctoral supervisor.
Before the lecture, Lin Yuanhe, president of Guangzhou Political Consultative Conference made a brief address. He believed the lecture would answer the questions and spark the aspiration. He hoped the participants should take this opportunity to choose major and strategic topics and give advices for building Guangzhou into a national central city.
Professor Li Yining talked on six issues of restructuring, inflation, the employment problem, narrowing the gap between urban and rural areas, independent innovation and the power of the development of China's economy. He used the deep economic strength and broad international vision to find the deep economics connotation from mining phenomena. He explained China's current economic hot issues through Keynes theory, new Keynes theory and property right economics. He also proposed China's future path for sustainable and stable economic growth from perspective of further urbanization, reform of state-owned forest, investment decision-making system reform, reform of resource price system and macroeconomic coordination model. At the end of the speech, he put forward the question of using "Chinese pattern" or "Chinese road". He thought "Chinese road" could show the path of how we reached here. He was confident on the "Chinese road" that Chinese economy would take in the future.