Bo Yibo

Chinese politician (1908–2007)

  • Hua Guofeng
  • Zhao Ziyang
Director of the National Economic CommissionIn office
May 1956 – September 1968Preceded byNew titleSucceeded bySu Jing [zh]Director of the National Basic Construction CommissionIn office
November 1954 – August 1956Preceded byNew titleSucceeded byWang Heshou [zh]Director of the National Organization CommitteeIn office
March 1950 – 1954Preceded byNew titleSucceeded byPosition revoked1st Minister of FinanceIn office
19 October 1949 – 18 September 1953Preceded byNew titleSucceeded byDeng XiaopingFirst Secretary of the North China Bureau of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist PartyIn office
1949–1954Preceded byLiu ShaoqiSucceeded byLi Xuefeng Personal detailsBorn
Bo Shucun (薄書存)

(1908-02-17)17 February 1908
Dingxiang County, Shanxi, Qing EmpireDied15 January 2007(2007-01-15) (aged 98)
Beijing, ChinaPolitical partyChinese CommunistRelationsBo Guagua (grandson)Children7, including Bo XilaiAlma materCentral Party School of the Chinese Communist PartyChinese nameChinese薄一波
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinBó Yībō
Bo ShucunSimplified Chinese薄书存Traditional Chinese薄書存
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinBóShūcún

Bo Yibo (Chinese: 薄一波; pinyin: Bó Yībō; Wade–Giles: Po2 I1-po1; 17 February 1908 – 15 January 2007) was a Chinese politician. He was one of the most senior political figures in China during the 1980s and 1990s.

After joining the Chinese Communist Party when he was 17, he worked as a Communist Party organizer in his native city of Taiyuan, Shanxi. He was promoted to organize Communist guerrilla movements in northern China from a headquarters in Tianjin in 1928, but he was arrested and imprisoned by Kuomintang police in 1931. In 1936, with the tacit support of the Communist Party, Bo signed an anti-communist confession to secure his release. After his release Bo returned to Shanxi, rejoined the communists, and fought both the Kuomintang and the Japanese Empire in northern China until the Communists completed their unification of mainland China in 1949.

During Bo's career he held successive posts as Communist China's inaugural Minister of Finance, a member of the Communist Party's Politburo, Vice-Premier, chairman of State Economic Commission, and vice-chairman of the party's Central Advisory Commission. Bo was purged in 1966 by the Mao-backed Gang of Four, but he was brought back to power by Deng Xiaoping in the late 1970s, after Mao's death.

Bo was one of a select group of powerful veterans centred on Deng who were informally known as the "Eight Immortals" for their political longevity and for the vast influence they commanded during the 1980s and 1990s. After returning to power Bo supported economic liberalization, but was a moderate conservative politically. He initially supported both Hu Yaobang and the 1989 Tiananmen protesters, but he was eventually persuaded by hardliners to support both Hu's dismissal in 1987 and the use of violence against protesters in 1989. Bo's political involvement declined in the 1990s, but he used his influence to support both Deng Xiaoping and Jiang Zemin, and to promote the career of his son, Bo Xilai. He was the last remaining, and longest-lived, of the Eight Elders at the time of his death on 15 January 2007, just a little over a month short of his 99th birthday.

Biography

Early life

Bo Yibo was born in Taiyuan, the capital of Shanxi, which had become one of the poorest provinces in China by the early 20th century. His father was a craftsman who produced paper, but the family was so poor that they were forced to drown one of Bo's newborn brothers because they were not wealthy enough to feed him. As a student, Bo was politically active, and once organized a protest against local land taxes.[1] After graduating from high school in Taiyuan he attended Beijing University.[2] While studying in Beijing he joined the Chinese Communist Party, four years after it was founded, in 1925.[1]

Between 1925 and 1928 Bo held a number of minor, local positions as a Communist Party organizer in his home city of Taiyuan. After Chiang Kai-shek's Kuomintang (KMT) began to violently suppress communists across China in 1927, Bo went into hiding and continued to organize Communist activities in rural areas. In 1928 Bo was sent by the Party to work underground as a Party organizer in Tianjin. He was arrested by the KMT three times; and, after the last time, in 1931, he spent several years in jail. While imprisoned in a correctional facility for military personnel in Beijing, Bo held a formal Party title and was responsible for spreading communism and organizing communist activities in the prison.[3]

In late 1936 the Kuomintang warlord governing Bo's home province of Shanxi, Yan Xishan, began to fear that the Japanese Empire was planning to invade China and formed a "united front" with the Communists to resist the Japanese in Shanxi. Yan then began attracting Shanxi natives across China to return and work for his government in various patriotic organizations. Yan arranged for Guo Yingyi, one of Bo's former classmates and a former Communist then working for Yan, to travel to Beijing and secure Bo's cooperation. Guo succeeded in persuading Bo to sign an anti-Communist confession to secure his release[4] (with the tacit support of the Communist Party)[1] and Bo returned to Shanxi to work with Yan Xishan in October 1936.[4]

After returning to Shanxi, Yan placed Bo in charge of his "Patriotic Sacrifice League", a local organization dedicated to organizing local resistance against Japanese invasion[4] (which Bo organized as a front for promoting Communism).[5] While working under Yan, Bo organized a "dare-to-die" corps of young volunteers[1] and used his good relationship with Yan to persuade Yan to release communists that he was holding in prison.[5] After the Japanese succeeded in taking northern Shanxi in 1937 and wiping out 90% of Yan's military forces,[6] Bo collected the survivors of his unit and conducted anti-Japanese guerrilla operations in southern Shanxi. When cooperation between Yan and the Communists ended in 1939, Bo led the survivors of his unit that were loyal to him and joined the Communist Eighth Route Army.[5] Bo worked until the Japanese surrendered, in 1945, as a commander and political commissar in the People's Liberation Army, fighting the Japanese in Shanxi, Hebei, Shandong, and Henan. He held a number of positions within the Party that recognized his administrative authority over much of these areas, and his prestige and influence grew throughout the period of the war.[3] During the later stages of Chinese Civil War, from 1946 to 1949, Bo worked closely under Liu Shaoqi and General Nie Rongzhen.

People's Republic of China

After the Communists won the civil war in 1949, Bo worked as China's finance minister and chairman of the State Planning Commission. In 1956, the State Economic Commission was established under Bo in order to ease administrative burdens on the State Planning Commission.[7]: 17–18  Bo served in a number of other similar positions, including vice premier (from 1957) under Zhou Enlai.[3][8]

During the early 1950s he was Mao's swimming partner.[1]

He promoted moderate economic policies until he lost Mao's favour in 1958.

In 1964, Bo and Li Fuchun traveled to southwest China to relay Mao's selection of Panzhihua as the base for steel industry development during China's Third Front construction.[9]: 102 

Bo Yibo was a member of the CCP Politburo from the 8th National Party Congress in 1956 to the beginning of the Cultural Revolution, and again during the leadership of Deng Xiaoping, from 1979 until the 12th National Party Congress in 1982, when most of the elders retired from formal government positions.

Persecution in the Cultural Revolution

When the Cultural Revolution began in 1966, Bo was quickly identified as a "capitalist roader" and purged as one of the "61 Renegades"—Party members who had spent time in Kuomintang prisons.[10] Jiang Qing produced the anti-communist statement that Bo had signed in 1937 with the Kuomintang in order to secure his release from prison, accusing him of "betraying the party" and making him an easy target for persecution. On 9 February 1967, Kang Sheng and his associates organized a rally in the Beijing Workers Stadium to criticize and "struggle against" Bo. Bo was paraded through the stadium with an iron plaque around his neck describing his "crimes", but he was more defiant than most victims persecuted by Red Guards, and demanded (unsuccessfully) to speak in his own defence. While being paraded he shouted: "I am not a traitor! I am a member of the Communist Party!" Bo's insistence that he was a loyal Communist Party member and that Mao had approved all of his actions created a chaotic atmosphere, and the rally was cancelled after three minutes.[1][11]

After the rally Bo was transferred to a Beijing prison, where he was charged and convicted of many crimes, including being "a backbone general of the Liu-Deng Black Headquarters", "a core element of the Liu Shaoqi renegade clique", "a big traitor", "a counter-revolutionary revisionist element", and "a Three Anti element". His captors claimed that many of these crimes should be punished by death. Because of Bo's stubborn refusal to break down and "confess" to these charges, he was subjected to various means of torture throughout 1966 and 1967, during which he was routinely beaten and systematically deprived of food, water and sleep.[12]

While imprisoned, Bo attempted to keep notes on the circumstances of his beatings by writing on scraps of newspaper, but his jailers confiscated these and used them as evidence of Bo's recalcitrance. Eventually, his hands trembled so much that he could not hold chopsticks, and he had to scrape his rice off the floor of his cell. When he complained to his jailers that this was "not the communist way", his jailers only beat him more severely.[1] Bo's children were jailed or sent to the countryside, and his wife died in captivity (she was reportedly beaten to death by Red Guards,[1][8] but they claimed that she committed suicide).[13] Bo Xiyong, Bo Xilai, and Bo Xicheng were imprisoned at the ages of sixteen, seventeen and seventeen (respectively), and Bo Xining was sent to the countryside at the age of fourteen.[14] Bo remained in prison for over a decade.

Career under Deng Xiaoping

Three years after Mao died, in 1979, Deng Xiaoping led an effort to rehabilitate members of the Communist Party who had been persecuted during the Cultural Revolution, and Bo was released from prison and reinstated as a member of the Politburo,[1] and to his former position of vice premier.[8] He joined the ranks of a small group of other senior officials of Deng's generation who Deng had returned to government known as the "Eight Immortals". In 1982 he was promoted to the Central Advisory Commission, a formal group of Party elders with over forty years of political experience. During the 1980s the group clashed with a group of younger reformers within the Party led by Hu Yaobang.[1]

Bo came to support economic reform after one of his trips in the 1980s to Boeing's facilities in the United States. During his visit, Bo discovered that there were only two airplanes parked at the facility. He asked the Boeing executives whether there would be any planes left if the two that he saw were gone. The company's executives answered that two was the exact number they wanted at this particular time, because their production was based on customer orders and anything more than necessary would be a waste of resources. After this visit to Boeing, Bo became much more critical of the Chinese practice of a planned economy, pointing out that excesses of production were in fact a waste of resources. Even for a planned economy, Bo believed that central planning should be based on market demand instead of on rigid Soviet-style planning undertaken without regard to market forces.[citation needed]

Bo was an important supporter of economic reform in the early 1980s, but eventually supported the efforts of other, more conservative, party elders to remove Hu from power in 1987. During the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 Bo initially supported moderate Party leaders who called to compromise with protesters, but was later persuaded to support Party hardliners who believed that the students were secretly being controlled by "imperialists with ulterior motives". He ultimately supported the decision to use force to suppress the demonstrations.[1]

After 1989 Bo intervened numerous times to support Deng's efforts to restart economic (but not political) liberalization, and to prevent economic hardliners from dominating Party politics.[1] Even after completely retiring during the 1990s, his status meant that he remained an influential figure who still pulled strings behind the scenes and could make or unmake party officials.[8] He used his influence to support the rise of Jiang Zemin, who became the General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party in the 1989. In 1993 he co-authored a book on the early history of the Chinese Communist Party.[8]

Bo closely supported the political career of his son, Bo Xilai,[1] who was considered a member of the "Crown Prince Party," though its members are only loosely affiliated by their background. Bo Xilai eventually rose to become China's commerce minister; and, later, the Communist Party Committee Secretary of Chongqing, but his political career ended with the 2012 Wang Lijun scandal. The rest of Bo Yibo's children obtained foreign residency. His daughter became an American citizen and resides in the U.S.[citation needed]

Death

Bo lived long enough to be the oldest member of the Communist Party in China by the end of his life.[1] He died of an undisclosed illness on 15 January 2007.[10][15] He was cremated and his remains were interred at Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery next to his wife Hu Ming.[16] His daughter, who died twelve years later, was buried next to them.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Gittings
  2. ^ Wortzel 32
  3. ^ a b c China Daily
  4. ^ a b c Feng and Goodman 158
  5. ^ a b c Wortzel 33
  6. ^ Gillin 273–274
  7. ^ Hou, Li (2021). Building for oil: Daqing and the Formation of the Chinese Socialist State. Harvard-Yenching Institute monograph series. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 978-0-674-26022-1.
  8. ^ a b c d e Kahn
  9. ^ Hou, Li (2021). Building for oil: Daqing and the Formation of the Chinese Socialist State. Harvard-Yenching Institute monograph series. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Asia Center. ISBN 978-0-674-26022-1.
  10. ^ a b Financial Times
  11. ^ Wu and Peng 123
  12. ^ Wu and Peng 123–132
  13. ^ Wu and Peng 135
  14. ^ Wu and Peng
  15. ^ "Obituary: Bo Yibo". The Guardian. 24 January 2007. Retrieved 13 January 2023.
  16. ^ South China Morning Post

Bibliography

  • "Biography of Bo Yibo". China Daily. 17 January 2007. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  • Feng Chongyi and Goodman, David S. G., eds. North China at War: The Social Ecology of Revolution, 1937–1945. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman and Littlefield. 2000. ISBN 0-8476-9938-2. Retrieved 3 June 2012.
  • "Bo Yibo, Chinese Revolutionary, Dies at 98" Financial Times. 17 January 2007. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  • Gillin, Donald G. Warlord: Yen Hsi-shan in Shansi Province 1911–1949. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. 1967.
  • Gittings, John. "Bo Yibo: Veteran Chinese Leader and 'Immortal' whose Loyalty to the Party Survived its Purges". The Guardian. 24 January 2007. Retrieved 27 May 2012.
  • Kahn, Joseph. "Bo Yibo, Leader Who Helped Reshape China's Economy, Dies". New York Times. 16 January 2007. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
  • Wortzel, Larry M. Dictionary of Contemporary Chinese Military History. Westport, CT: Greenwood. 1999. ISBN 978-0313293375. Retrieved 29 May 2012.
  • Wu, Nan (23 September 2013). "Babaoshan struggles to meet demand as cadres' final resting place". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 13 January 2022.
  • Wu Linquan and Peng Fei. "Bo Yibo Has an Attitude Problem". In China's Cultural Revolution, 1966–1969: Not A Dinner Party. Ed. Michael Schoenhals. Armonk, New York: East Gate. 1996. ISBN 1-56324-736-4. pp. 122–135. Retrieved 28 May 2012.
Party political offices
Preceded by First Secretary of the North China Bureau of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
1949–1954
Succeeded by
New title Executive Vice Chairman of the Central Advisory Commission
1982–1992
Succeeded by
Position revoked
Government offices
New title Minister of Finance of the People's Republic of China
1949–1952
Succeeded by
Rong Zihe [zh]
Director of the National Organization Committee
1950–1954
Succeeded by
Position revoked
Director of the National Basic Construction Commission
1954–1956
Succeeded by
Wang Heshou [zh]
Director of the National Economic Commission
1956–1968
Succeeded by
Su Jing [zh]
Director of the National Machinery Industry Commission
1980–1982
Succeeded by
  • v
  • t
  • e
Zhou Enlai Cabinet (1954–1959)
Premier12 Vice-PremiersSecretary-GeneralMinisters
   

01 Ministry of Internal Affairs Xie Juezai
02 Ministry of Foreign Affairs Zhou EnlaiPSC
03 Ministry of National Defense Peng DehuaiP
04 Ministry of Public Security Luo Ruiqing
05 Ministry of Justice Shi Liang
06 Ministry of Supervision Qian Ying♀
07 State Planning Commission Li FuchunP
08 State Infrastructure Commission Bo Yibo → Wang Heshou
09 Ministry of Finance Li XiannianP
010 Ministry of Food Zhang Naiqi
011 Ministry of Commerce Zeng Shan
012 Ministry of Foreign Trade Ye Jizhuang
013 Ministry of Heavy Industry/ Ministry of Metallurgical Industry Wang Heshou
014 Ministry of Chemical Industry Peng Tao
015 Ministry of Building Materials Industry Lai Jifa

016 First Ministry of Machine Building Huang Jing
017 Second Ministry of Machine Building Zhao Erlu
018 Ministry Of Fuel Industries Chen Yu
019 Ministry of Geology Li Siguang
020 Ministry of Building Construction Liu Xiufeng
021 Ministry of Textile Industry Jiang Guangnai
022 Ministry of Light Industry Jia Tuofu → Sha Qianli
023 Ministry of Local Industry Sha Qianli
024 Ministry of Railways Teng Daiyuan
025 Ministry of Transport Zhang Bojun
026 Ministry of Posts & Telecommunications Zhu Xuefan
027 Ministry of Agriculture Liao Luyan
028 Ministry of Forestry Liang Xi
029 Ministry of Water Resources Fu Zuoyi
030 Ministry of Labor Ma Wenrui

031 Ministry of Culture Shen Yanbing
032 Ministry of Higher Education Yang Xiufeng
033 Ministry of Education Zhang Xiruo
034 Ministry of Health Li Dequan
035 Commission for Physical Culture and Sports He LongP
036 Ethnic Affairs Commission Ulanhu
037 Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission He Xiangning
038 Third Ministry of Machine Building Zhang Linzhi
039 National Economic Commission Bo Yibo
040 National Technical Commission Huang Jing
041 Ministry of Urban Development Wan Li
042 Ministry of Food Industry Li Zhuchen
043 Ministry of Aquatic Products Xu Deheng
044 Ministry of State Farms and Land Reclamation Wang Zhen
045 Ministry of Timber Industry Luo Longji

  • v
  • t
  • e
Zhou Enlai Cabinet (1959–1965)
Premier
16 Vice-Premiers
Secretary-General
Ministers
   

01 Internal Affairs Qian Ying → Zeng Shan
02 Foreign Affairs Chen Yi P
03 National Defense Peng DehuaiPLin BiaoP
04 Public Security Luo RuiqingXie Fuzhi
05 National Basic Construction Commission Chen YunPSC
06 State Planning Commission Li FuchunP
07 National Economic Commission Bo Yibo
08 National Science and Technology Commission Nie Rongzhen
09 Finance Li XiannianP
010 Food Sha Qianli
011 Commerce Cheng ZihuaYao Yilin
012 Foreign Trade Ye Jizhuang
013 Aquatic Products Xu Deheng

014 Metallurgical Industry Wang Heshou
015 Chemical Industry Peng Tao
016 First Ministry of Machine Building Zhao ErluDuan Junyi
017 Second Ministry of Machine Building Song RenqiongLiu Jie
018 Coal Industry Zhang Linzhi
019 Petroleum Industry Yu Qiuli
020 Geology Li Siguang
021 Building Construction Liu Xiufeng
022 Textile Industry Jiang Guangnai
023 Light Industry Li Zhuchen
024 Railways Teng Daiyuan
025 Transport Wang Shoudao
026 Posts & Telecommunications Zhu Xuefan

027 Ministry of Agriculture Liao Luyan
028 State Farms and Land Reclamation Wang Zhen
029 Forestry Liu Wenhui
030 Water Resources and Electric Power Fu Zuoyi
031 Labor Ma Wenrui
032 Culture Mao Dun
033 Education Yang Xiufeng
034 Ministry of Health Li Dequan
035 Commission for Physical Culture and Sports He LongP
036 Ethnic Affairs Commission Ulanhu
037 Foreign Cultural Liaison Commission Zhang Xiruo
038 Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission Liao Chengzhi
039 Agricultural Machinery Chen Zhengren
040 Machinery Industry Zhang Liankui → Sun Zhiyuan

  • v
  • t
  • e
Zhou Enlai Cabinet (1965–1975)
Premier
16 Vice-Premiers
Secretary-General
Ministers
   

01 Foreign Affairs Chen Yi P
02 National Defense Lin BiaoPSC
03 State Planning Commission Li FuchunP
04 National Economic Commission Bo Yibo
05 Science and Technology Commission Nie Rongzhen
06 Public Security Xie Fuzhi
07 Internal Affairs Zeng Shan
08 Ethnic Affairs Commission Ulanhu
09 Ministry of Agriculture Liao Luyan
010 State Farms and Land Reclamation Wang Zhen
011 Forestry Liu Wenhui
012 Aquatic Products Xu Deheng
013 Metallurgical Industry Lü Dong
014 Chemical Industry Gao Yang
015 First Ministry of Machine Building Duan Junyi
016 Second Ministry of Machine Building Liu Jie

017 Third Ministry of Machine Building Sun Zhiyuan
018 Fourth Ministry of Machine Building Wang Zheng [zh]
019 Fifth Ministry of Machine Building Qiu Chuangcheng
020 Sixth Ministry of Machine Building Fang Qiang [zh]
021 Seventh Ministry of Machine Building Wang Bingzhang
022 Eighth Ministry of Machine Building Chen Zhengren
023 Coal Industry Zhang Linzhi
024 Petroleum and Chemical Industries Yu Qiuli
025 Water Resources and Electric Power Fu Zuoyi
026 Geology Li Siguang
027 Building Construction Li Renjun [zh]Liu Yumin
028 Building Materials Industry Lai Jifa
029 Textile Industry Jiang Guangnai
030 Light Industry Li Zhuchen
031 Railways Lü Zhengcao 032 Transport Sun Daguang

033 Posts & Telecommunications Zhu Xuefan
033 Material Management Yuan Baohua
034 Labor Ma Wenrui
035 Finance Li XiannianP
036 Food Sha Qianli
037 Ministry of Commerce Yao Yilin
038 Foreign Trade Ye Jizhuang
039 Culture Lu Dingyi
040 Education He Wei [zh]
041 Higher Education Jiang Nanxiang
042 Ministry of Health Qian Xinzhong
043 Commission for Physical Culture and Sports He Long
044 Foreign Cultural Liaison Committee Zhang Xiruo
045 Foreign Economic Liaison Committee Fang Yi
046 Overseas Chinese Affairs Commission Liao Chengzhi
047 Second Ministry of Light Industry Xu Yunbei
048 National Basic Construction Commission Gu Mu

  • v
  • t
  • e
Hua Guofeng Cabinet (1978–1983)
Hua Guofeng (resigned Sep. 1980)Zhao Ziyang
Before 4 May 1982
  1. Deng Xiaoping (resigned Sep. 1980)
  2. Li Xiannian (resigned Sep. 1980)
  3. Xu Xiangqian (resigned Sep. 1980)
  4. Ji Dengkui (dismissed Apr. 1980)
  5. Yu Qiuli
  6. Chen Xilian (dismissed Apr. 1980)
  7. Geng Biao
  8. Chen Yonggui (dismissed Sep. 1980)
  9. Fang Yi
  10. Wang Zhen (resigned Sep. 1980)
  11. Gu Mu
  12. Kang Shi'en
  13. Chen Muhua
  14. Wang Renzhong (added Dec. 1978, resigned Sep. 1980)
  15. Chen Yun (added Jul. 1979, resigned Sep. 1980)
  16. Bo Yibo (added Jul. 1979)
  17. Yao Yilin (added Jul. 1979)
  18. Ji Pengfei (added Sep. 1979)
  19. Zhao Ziyang (added Apr. 1980)
  20. Wan Li (added Apr. 1980)
  21. Yang Jingren (added Sep. 1980)
  22. Zhang Aiping (added Sep. 1980)
  23. Huang Hua (added Sep. 1980)
After 4 May 1982
State Councilors
(since 4 May 1982)
   

01 Foreign Affairs  Huang HuaWu Xueqian

02 National Defense  Xu Xianqian → Geng BiaoZhang Aiping

03 State Planning Commission  Yu QiuliYao Yilin

04 State Economic Commission  Kang Shi'enYuan BaohuaZhang Jinfu

05 State Construction Commission  Gu Mu → Han Guang

06 State Science and Technology Commission  Fang Yi

07 Ethnic Affairs Commission  Yang Jingren

08 Public Security  Zhao Cangbi

09 Civil Affairs  Cheng ZihuaCui Naifu

10 Foreign Trade  Li Qiang → Zheng TuobinChen Muhua

11 Foreign Economic Relations & Trade  Chen Muhua

12 Agriculture & Forestry  Yang Ligong

later split into

12-1 Agriculture  Huo ShilianLin Hujia

12-2 Agriculture, Animal Husbandry & Fisheries  Lin Hujia

13 Metallurgical Industry  Tang Ke → Li Dongye

14 1st Ministry of Machine Building  Zhou Zijian → Rao Bin

15 Agricultural Machinery  Yang Ligong

later merged into

14, 15 Machine Building  Zhou Jiannan

16 2nd Ministry of Machine BuildingNuclear Industry  Liu Wei → Zhang Chen♀

17 3rd Ministry of Machine BuildingAviation Industry  Lü DongMo Wenxiang → Zhang Jun

18 4th Ministry of Machine BuildingElectronics Industry  Wang Zheng → Qian Min → Zhang Ting

19 5th Ministry of Machine BuildingOrdnance Industry  Zhang Zhen → Yu Yi

20 6th Ministry of Machine Building  Chai Shufan → An Zhiwen

21 7th Ministry of Machine Building  Song RenqiongZheng Tianxiang

22 Coal Industry  Xiao Han → Gao Yangwen

23 Petroleum Industry  Song ZhenmingKang Shi'en → Tang Ke

24 Chemical Industry  Sun Jingwen → Qin Zhongda

25 Water Resources and Electric Power  Qian Zhengying

later split into

25-1 Electric Industry  Liu LanboLi Peng

25-2 Water Resources  Qian Zhengying

26 Textile Industry  Qian Zhiguang → Hao Jianxiu♀ → Wu Wenying

27 Light Industry  Liang Lingguang → Song Jiwen → Yang Bo

28 Railways  Duan JunyiGuo WeichengLiu JianzhangChen Puru

29 Transport  Ye FeiZeng Sheng → Peng Deqing → Li Qing

30 Posts & Telecommunications  Zhong Fuxiang → Wang Zigang → Wen Minsheng

31 Finance  Zhang Jinfu → Wu Bo → Wang Bingqian

32 Culture  Huang ZhenZhu Muzhi

33 Education  Liu Xiyao → Jiang Nanxiang → He Dongchang

34 Health  Jiang YizhenQian Xinzhong → Cui Yueli

35 Commerce  Yao Yilin → Wang Lei → Jin Ming → Wang Lei → Liu Yi

36 Forestry  Luo Yuchuan → Yong Wentao → Yang Zhong

37 Building Material Industry  Song Yangchu

38 Agricultural Reclamation  Gao Yang

39 Food  Chen GuodongZhao Xinchu

40 Eighth Ministry of Machine Building|8th Ministry of Machine Building  Jiao Ruoyu

41 Justice  Wei WenboLiu Fuzhi

42 Geology and Mineral Resources  Sun Daguang

43 Urban-Rural Construction & Environmental Protection  Li Ximing

44 Labor and Personnel  Zhao Shouyi

45 Radio, Film & Television  Wu Lengxi

Directors
   

01 Federation of Supply & Marketing Cooperatives  Chen Guodong → Niu Yinguan

02 State Physical Education & Sports Commission  Wang Meng → Li Menghua

03 State Agriculture Commission  Wang RenzhongWan Li

04 Financial and Economic Affairs Commission  Chen Yun

05 Foreign Investment Regulation Commission  Gu Mu

06 Import & Export Regulation Commission  Gu Mu

07 Machine Building Commission  Bo Yibo

08 National Energy Commission  Yu Qiuli

09 Commission for Cultural Relations of Foreign Countries  Huang Zhen

10 Population & Family Planning Commission  Chen MuhuaQian Xinzhong

10 Commission for Science, Technology & Industry for National Defense  Chen Bin

♀: female
  • v
  • t
  • e
Before 11th Plenum
(Aug 1966)
Standing Committee
(PSC)
  1. Mao Zedong (Chairman)
  2. Liu Shaoqi (Vice-Chairman)
  3. Zhou Enlai (Vice-Chairman)
  4. Zhu De (Vice-Chairman)
  5. Chen Yun (Vice-Chairman)
  6. Lin Biao (added May 1958, Vice-Chairman)
  7. Deng Xiaoping (General Secretary)
Other members
in surname stroke order
Alternate members
After 11th Plenum
Standing Committee
  1. Mao Zedong (Chairman)
  2. Lin Biao (Vice-Chairman)
  3. Zhou Enlai
  4. Tao Zhu (purged Jan 1967)
  5. Chen Boda
  6. Deng Xiaoping (purged Jan 1967)
  7. Kang Sheng
  8. Liu Shaoqi (purged Jan 1967)
  9. Zhu De
  10. Li Fuchun
  11. Chen Yun
Other members
in surname stroke order
Alternate members
  1. Ulanhu (purged Aug 1966)
  2. Bo Yibo (purged Jan 1967)
  3. Li Xuefeng
  4. Song Renqiong (purged Aug 1967)
  5. Xie Fuzhi
7th→8th→9th→10th→11th→12th→13th→14th→15th→16th→17th→18th→19th→20th
  • v
  • t
  • e
Provisional Cabinet
1st Cabinet
2nd Cabinet
3rd Cabinet
  1. Lin Biao (died 1971)
  2. Chen Yun (dismissed 1969)
  3. Deng Xiaoping (dismissed 1968, reinstated 1973)
  4. He Long (died 1969)
  5. Chen Yi (died 1972)
  6. Ke Qingshi (died 1965)
  7. Ulanhu (dismissed 1968)
  8. Li Fuchun (died 1975)
  9. Li Xiannian
  10. Tan Zhenlin
  11. Nie Rongzhen
  12. Bo Yibo (dismissed 1967)
  13. Lu Dingyi (dismissed 1966)
  14. Luo Ruiqing (dismissed 1966)
  15. Tao Zhu (died 1969)
  16. Xie Fuzhi (died 1972)
4th Cabinet
  1. Deng Xiaoping (dismissed 1976, reinstated 1977)
  2. Zhang Chunqiao (dismissed 1977)
  3. Li Xiannian
  4. Chen Xilian
  5. Ji Dengkui
  6. Hua Guofeng
  7. Chen Yonggui
  8. Wu Guixian(resigned 1977)
  9. Wang Zhen
  10. Yu Qiuli
  11. Gu Mu
  12. Sun Jian
5th Cabinet (1978)
5th Cabinet (1980)
5th Cabinet (1982)
6th Cabinet
7th Cabinet
8th Cabinet
9th Cabinet
10th Cabinet
  1. Huang Ju (died 2007)
  2. Wu Yi ♀
  3. Zeng Peiyan
  4. Hui Liangyu
11th Cabinet
12th Cabinet
13th Cabinet
14th Cabinet
  • v
  • t
  • e
5th State Council
6th State Council
7th State Council
8th State Council
9th State Council
  1. Chi Haotian
  2. Luo Gan
  3. Ismail Amat
  4. Wu Yi ♀
  5. Wang Zhongyu
10th State Council
11th State Council
12th State Council
13th State Council
  1. Wei Fenghe
  2. Wang Yong
  3. Wang Yi
  4. Xiao Jie
  5. Zhao Kezhi
14th State Council
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Ministers of Finance of the People's Republic of China
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