Economy of Shanxi
- Wade-Giles romanization:
- Shan-hsi
- Conventional:
- Shansi
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Agriculture
Because of widespread soil erosion, only about one-third of the province is under cultivation. Extensive soil and water conservation efforts since 1949 have taken the form of terracing, afforestation, digging irrigation canals, diking cultivated plots, soil desalinization, and land reclamation along rivers.
In the extreme north the short growing season (120 days) and long, cold winter limit cultivation to one annual crop of spiked millet, spring wheat, naked oats (oats with no covering on the kernels), potatoes, and sesame. In the rest of the province—except for the mountainous areas—the longer growing season (210 days) permits three crops in two years or two crops in one year. Winter wheat, millet, soybeans, kaoliang (a variety of grain sorghum), corn (maize), and cotton are raised in adequately irrigated areas. Some tobacco and peanuts (groundnuts) as well as some fruits are produced in the central basins and on the Huang He floodplain.
Only a small part of Shanxi’s cultivated acreage is devoted to cash crops, such as cotton and sesame, the latter grown both for its oil seeds and for its fibre. Other cash crops include castor beans, rapeseed, and sugar beets.
The relatively low ratio of population to land over much of Shanxi’s hilly terrain has traditionally fostered animal husbandry. Sheep are raised for their high wool yields, notably those bred in the northeast near Guangling. Domestic animals include pigs, horses, yellow oxen (for transport), donkeys, and chickens. Dairying has become increasingly important in northern parts of the province.
Resources and power
Shanxi is China’s major coal region, producing a large proportion of the country’s output. Proven reserves of anthracite and high-grade coking coal have supported the development of heavy industry and thermal generation of electricity. Iron ore is mined from vast deposits in central Shanxi. The largest titanium and vanadium (metallic elements used in alloys such as steel) deposits in China are located near Fenxi. Other mined minerals include aluminium, cobalt, copper, and edible salt. There has been some development of hydroelectric power.
Manufacturing
Shanxi’s industrial sector is based on its abundant coal resources and is focused on heavy industries concentrated in the Taiyuan-Yuci region. The iron and steel sector produces ingot steel, pig iron, and finished steel products. Heavy machinery, industrial chemicals, and chemical fertilizers are produced, as are cement, paper, textiles, milled flour, and wine. Other mining and iron and steel centres include Yangquan, Changzhi, Datong (which also produces cement and mining machinery), and Linfen. There has also been rapid development since the 1980s in the sectors of electronics, textiles, food processing, and household plastic products. Local traditional products include fen jiu (a sorghum-based liqueur) from Xinghua (Xinghuacun) and a type of aged vinegar from Qingxu.
Transportation
Shanxi relies heavily on rail lines, both for intraprovince transport and for shipping raw materials, industrial commodities, and foodstuffs outside the province. The longest of these, the Tongpu trunk line, runs from Datong to Fenglingdu, in the southwestern corner of the province. Other trunk lines pass through the province, notably the line from Beijing to Baotou, and additional branchlines connect the main lines with more recently opened industrial and mining sites. Major efforts have been made to relieve the pressure on Shanxi’s railways from ever-increasing freight volume and limited coal transport capability. Rail lines have been double-tracked and electrified, and trunk and spur lines have been constructed.
Express highways and long-distance, all-weather roads have been extended, especially in or near major cities and coal mines; many roads serve as feeder routes to the rail lines. The Fen River is navigable for small flat-bottomed boats as far north as Linfen. However, freight traffic on the Fen, as well as on the north-south section of the Huang He, is insignificant. Taiyuan is the hub of air traffic for the province.
Government and society
The chief provincial administrative body from 1967 to 1980 was the Shanxi Provincial Revolutionary Committee. It was replaced in 1980 by the People’s Government, which is the administrative arm of the People’s Congress. The province is now divided into 11 prefecture-level municipalities (dijishi). At the next lower level there are districts under municipalities (shixiaqu), counties (xian), and county-level municipalities (xianjishi).
The educational and medical institutions that were established in Shanxi, mainly through foreign initiative, between 1898 and 1910 played a minor role in ameliorating the widespread poverty, illiteracy, and substandard health conditions that then prevailed. Shanxi University, founded in Taiyuan by an English missionary in 1902, was one of the first in China to offer Western curricula in liberal arts, law, and medicine. Since 1949 technical schools for agriculture, mining, forestry, and machine technology have been established, as have universities, colleges, senior middle schools, and primary schools. The province now has more than 50 institutions of higher education. The medical colleges and affiliated hospitals in Taiyuan offer treatment and full courses of study in both Western and traditional Chinese medicine.
Public works projects include a centralized water supply system based at Lancun that regulates the flow of the groundwater supply of the Taiyuan Basin, modernized sewerage and waste disposal facilities in the major cities, housing projects, and extensive “green belt” areas that are planted with thousands of trees. A major project completed in the early 21st century diverts water from the Huang He at Wanjiazhai in northwestern Shanxi to Taiyuan and Datong in order to alleviate water shortages in those two cities.
Cultural life
Shanxi’s long-standing position as an avenue of communication between the North China Plain, the Mongolian steppes, and Central Asia gave rise to a rich and varied cultural and folkloric tradition. Several distinctive forms of Shanxi opera became popular under the Ming and Qing dynasties. Metalworking has been a specialty of Shanxi craftsmen since the 2nd millennium bce. The province was also famous for the uniquely sculpted decorative tiles and glazed pottery figures used for temple decoration.
Jin Memorial Hall (Jinci), some 15 miles (25 km) southwest of Taiyuan, is Shanxi’s best-known temple complex. It was originally built in the 5th century ce, and during subsequent periods it served as a monastery and as the centre for several religious cults. Another major attraction is the Yungang cave complex near Datong. Designated a UNESCO World Heritage site in 2001, the caves contain some splendid masterpieces of Chinese Buddhist art. Also of note is the ancient city of Pingyao (Ping Yao), in central Shanxi, which was named a World Heritage site in 1997.
Among Shanxi’s other popular tourist destinations are Mount Wutai, one of Buddhism’s most holy places; Mount Heng, the northernmost of the five holy mountains of China and home to the famous suspended temple complex on its steep cliffs; and the Hukou Falls on the Huang He, in southwestern Shanxi on the border with Shaanxi.