The “Four Modernizations” is one of the most significant political and economic concepts in modern Chinese history. While first proposed by Zhou Enlai in 1963, it became the central pillar of Deng Xiaoping's leadership in the late 1970s, following the death of Mao Zedong and the end of the chaotic Cultural Revolution. This policy marked a dramatic ideological shift from political class struggle to economic pragmatism. The goal was simple and powerful: to build a strong, prosperous, and modern China. This ambition resonated deeply with a population weary of instability and poverty. The Four Modernizations were the engine of the “Reform and Opening Up” (改革开放, gǎigé kāifàng) policy, which opened China to foreign investment and trade, ultimately lifting hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. A Western parallel might be the “New Deal” in the United States. Both were massive, nation-defining government programs aimed at economic recovery and national transformation. However, the key difference lies in the political system. The Four Modernizations were a top-down, state-planned initiative within a one-party socialist system, designed to strengthen the nation under the control of the Communist Party. The New Deal, in contrast, was a series of programs enacted within a democratic framework to combat the Great Depression. The parallel is in their transformative national scale, not their political mechanics.
Today, “四个现代化” is almost exclusively a historical and formal term. You will encounter it frequently in:
It is not used in everyday, casual conversation. Using it to describe personal goals (e.g., “the four modernizations of my apartment”) would sound very strange and overly formal, possibly even humorous. The term carries a strong positive connotation, representing a successful and celebrated period of national progress and rising living standards.