Traffic jams are no longer rare in Lhasa, though they were
beyond imagination only a decade ago. Streams of pedestrians,
vehicles and information intertwine in Lhasa, a city gradually on a
path toward modernization.
As the political, economic and cultural center of Tibet, Lhasa
has seen a 16.6 percent annual GDP increase in the past five
years,with its economic growth rate four percentage points higher
than that for the whole region and a total economic volume
accounting for one third of Tibet.
A recent report shows Internet users in Tibet have increased
from dozens in 1998 to the present nearly 40,000. Rapid economic
development in Lhasa has also attracted large numbers of people
from outside the city, and it is now faced with overcrowding -- a
common problem for all booming Chinese cities.
It was not many years ago that a car was considered a luxury
beyond reach. A recent report issued by the Lhasa city government
shows there are nearly 60,000 automobiles in Lhasa, and that one
out of every 23 people in Lhasa owns a private car, a number five
times the national average.
Deeply concerned about congestion, the regional government has
increased its allocation to traffic issues. To improve the urban
thoroughfare framework, the government has allocated 230 million
yuan (about US$28.75 million) to construct a two-direction
thoroughfare in the west suburb of Lhasa.
For most tourists, what attracts them most in Lhasa are the
ethnic-colored culture and special landscapes. Lhasa received 2.63
million tourists in the 2001-2005 period, with a combined tourism
revenue of 3.09 billion yuan (about US$386 million).
(Xinhua News Agency February 24, 2006)