A fully revitalized countryside is one that is full of vitality and energy.
A fully revitalized countryside will have modern infrastructure, including roads, bridges, electricity, communications, running water and other facilities, which will provide a solid foundation for the economic development of the countryside, and at the same time, the countryside's public ****services facilities will be improved, including schools, medical care, culture, sports and other facilities, in order to improve the quality of life of the countryside residents .
The comprehensively revitalized villages will focus on agricultural modernization and industrial upgrading, and will improve the efficiency and quality of agricultural production through the introduction of advanced agricultural technology and machinery and equipment. At the same time, the villages will also develop special industries, such as green agriculture, eco-tourism, and handicrafts, in order to improve the industrial competitiveness of the villages.
Taking the comprehensive revitalization of the countryside as the point and reference of urban-rural integration
The fundamental purpose of urban-rural integration is to break the dual structure of urban and rural areas and realize the integrated development of urban and rural areas. Due to the increase in factor productivity brought about by technological progress and spatial agglomeration, factors, especially labor, are more efficiently produced in the non-agricultural sector and in towns and cities, resulting in higher remuneration than in agriculture and the countryside. Therefore, the process of modernization since the Industrial Revolution has been manifested in the change of the sectoral and spatial structure of the economy, i.e., in the process of industrialization and urbanization, and the two are synergistic and mutually reinforcing.
Industrialization and urbanization have brought about the sectoral and spatial transfer of resource factors, and at the same time have been accompanied by the decline of the traditional countryside, but this process does not end with the demise of the traditional sectors and the countryside. In fact, with the advancement of agricultural modernization and social as well as urban transformation, the improvement of agricultural productivity and the upgrading of rural livability, urban and rural areas have reached a new equilibrium in industrial structure, spatial pattern, factor flow, and service*** enjoyment, that is, the state of urban-rural integration.