Abbreviation |
Zhongyang Zhengyanshi (中央政研室) |
---|---|
Formation | 1981 |
Type | Organization directly reporting to the Central Committee |
Location |
|
Director
|
Wang Huning |
Deputy directors
|
Zheng Xinli, Fang Li, Pan Shengzhou |
Parent organization
|
Central Committee of the Communist Party of China |
Formerly called
|
Research Office of the Secretariat Central Office for Political Structure Reform |
*Maintains full minister-level rank |
The Central Policy Research Office (Chinese: 中共中央政策研究室) is an institution of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China responsible for providing policy recommendations and insights to matters of governance, spanning political, social, and economic realms. It is responsible for drafting the ideology and theories of the Communist Party, as well as various policy pronouncements at major congresses or plenums.
The Office was founded in 1981, following the Cultural Revolution. Initially it was an office under the Secretariat of the Communist Party of China. Deng Liqun served as its first director. In 1987, after the ouster of reformer Hu Yaobang as General Secretary of the party and also as a result of Deng Liqun being politically sidelined, the office was re-organized and renamed as the "Central Office for Political Structure Reform", headed by Bao Tong, better known as the main secretary to then party leader Zhao Ziyang. Bao was later purged along with his boss, when Zhao fell out of favour after the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. In that year, the Political Reform Office was merged with the "Central Rural Research Office", after which it took on its current name.
The Office was a major force behind crafting the ideologies of three successive administrations: the "Three Represents" of Jiang Zemin, the Scientific Development Concept of Hu Jintao, and the Chinese Dream of Xi Jinping. Wang Huning, who took charge of the office in 2002, is seen as one of the main advisors of Xi Jinping.