用英语描述五十年前的深圳
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用英语描述五十年前的深圳
用英语描述五十年前的深圳
用英语描述五十年前的深圳
Shenzhen is situated in the southern province of Guangdong, which borders Hong Kong.
Although present day Shenzhen is a recent phenomenon, there has been some form of settlement in this area for thousands of years. During the late Ming dynasty Shenzhen, or Bao’an County as it was then known, was a small border town. Its name means "deep ditch," which is probably a reference to the narrow, yet deep rivers that are common in the area. It could also allude to the deep ditches that traverse paddy fields.
In 1980, Shenzhen became China’s first Special Economic Zone (SEZ) and its fate took a dramatic turn. Deng Xiaoping, the unofficial patron saint of Shenzhen, decided to put his ideas on economic reform to the test in what was then a rural area, and the results were truly remarkable. The city expanded swiftly. Infrastructure appeared at a lightning pace and skyscrapers shot up at "Shenzhen speed" -- three floors per day. Within the first 15 years the industrial revenue of the city increased a thousand-fold.
Shenzhen’s fortunes are inextricably linked to its geographical location. Bordering the Hong Kong SAR (Special Administrative Region), it functions as a pseudo-gateway for the world’s fastest growing economy. Shenzhen brings in more in export revenue than any other city in China, and its largest international trading partner is Hong Kong. Consequently, thousands of Hong Kong businesses have moved or expanded their operations into Shenzhen. Hong Kong’s residents have now even begun to cross the border to simply shop, eat and drink. Still others even live in Shenzhen and commute to work in Hong Kong each morning. This high-level economic integration has fueled speculation about future possibilities of administrative integration, but for now the two cities remain separate yet closely linked
Shenzhen’s economic fame has drawn millions of migrants from China’s hinterland. The city captures the imaginations of the rich and the poor, the ambitious and the desperate. Everyday, newly arrived hopefuls can be seen stepping off trains and long-distance buses, eager to carve out their proverbial slice of the pie. In the meantime, Shenzhen is moving away from an economy heavily based on textiles, light-industry and services and pushing itself into the high-tech sector. The phenomenal success of the last 25 years shows no sign of waning. For Shenzhen, history has only begun.
Being one of China’s wealthiest as well as one of its youngest cities, its existence is a true reflection of the extent of the economic metamorphosis that China has been experiencing since the 1980s. Where there was a small fishing village 25 years ago, a metropolis of 10 million people and growing now stands. From the laid-back resort feel of Shekuo to the teeming hustle and bustle of Dongmen, Shenzhen is both glitzy and seedy at the same time. Arguably, there is nowhere where the excesses of rapid economic change that are gripping China, with the resultant rampant consumerism and extremes of wealth and poverty, are more evident