Guo Dihuo


Guo Dihuo was a Chinese textile industrialist and politician. Born in Sydney, Australia, to an overseas Chinese family originally from Zhongshan, Guangdong, he was a prominent leader in China’s national industrial and commercial circles after 1949. He served as Vice Governor of Guangdong Province and held senior positions in the China Democratic National Construction Association, the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese, and the Chinese [People's Political Consultative Conference].

Biography

Guo Dihuo was born on October 19, 1904, in Sydney, Australia, to a family of overseas Chinese merchants from Zhongshan, Guangdong. He returned to China for his education and studied at Lingnan University in Guangzhou from 1918 to 1923. He later continued his studies in the United States, specializing in textile engineering at New Bedford Textile School in Massachusetts. After completing his studies with distinction, he returned to China in 1927 and joined the Shanghai-based Yong’an Textile and Dyeing Company, where he successively served as engineer, deputy manager, and deputy general manager.
During the Republican period, Guo played a key role in the modernization of China’s cotton textile industry. He introduced advanced Western technology, improved factory equipment and labor conditions, and expanded production capacity. By the time of the Second Sino-Japanese War, the Yong’an enterprise had grown into a major textile group with multiple spinning mills and a dyeing plant, whose products were widely sold in China and Southeast Asia. During the war, Guo assumed responsibility for the company’s operations in Shanghai. In the final years before the establishment of the People’s Republic of China, he resisted pressure to relocate the enterprise to Hong Kong and chose to remain in Shanghai, ensuring the preservation of domestic industrial capacity.
After the Founding of the [People's Republic of China|founding of the People’s Republic of China] in 1949, Guo actively supported the new government’s economic policies. He facilitated the return to China of large quantities of textile machinery and raw materials that had been ordered from abroad prior to liberation, contributing significantly to postwar industrial recovery. He also took the lead in donating funds and promoting public bond subscriptions to support national economic reconstruction and the Korean War effort. In 1950, he was invited to participate in the First National Committee of the CPPCC.
Guo later served as a member of the Shanghai Municipal People's Government, director of the Shanghai Returned [Overseas Chinese Federation], and a member of the East China Financial and Economic Commission. In 1958, he was appointed Vice Governor of Guangdong Province, where he focused on industrial development and overseas Chinese affairs. Following the start of China’s reform and opening-up policy, he worked extensively to attract overseas Chinese and foreign investment, despite suffering from a serious neurological illness that limited his mobility.
Throughout his career, Guo held numerous national and provincial positions, including vice chairman of the Central Committee of the China Democratic National Construction Association, vice chairman of the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese, vice chairman of the Guangdong Provincial CPPCC, and deputy director of the Standing Committee of the Guangdong Provincial People's Congress. He was also a member of the Drafting Committee for the Basic Law of Hong Kong. Guo Dihuo died in Guangzhou on April 9, 1986, at the age of 81.