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BEIJING, Mar. 10 -- The idea is simple: College
students may be exempted from the burden of paying back their student loans if
they volunteer to work at the grass-roots level in the nation's western region
for a still unspecified period.
The idea is being discussed at the on-going National People's Congress, Dai Guiying, a senior official
from the Office of the Leading Group for Western Region Development of the State
Council, told China Daily.
Quite a few of NPC deputies from western China have
pointed out that the region continues to be stuck within a vicious cycle, where
backward education, poverty and the so-called "brain drain" affect the region's
potential prosperity.
The slow economic development in the area has driven
away skilled people and scared off potential graduates. The results have in turn
degraded the local economy, said Li Zhuojuan, an NPC deputy from Yunnan
Province.
Li, who is a teacher at the Jingdong No 1 High School
in the province, said her school is still short of more than 40 teachers.
"Only four or five graduates apply for our jobs every
year, and most of them are unqualified," she said.
At the same time, graduates who leave the area to
study are later reluctant to return to work in their poverty-stricken hometowns.
Chen Quan, who came to Beijing to learn business
management three years ago from South China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region,
said his hometown is his last choice for a job.
Guangxi, in Chen's eyes, has few powerful enterprises
and lags far behind in information exchange. "It can help little with my
self-improvement and future," he said.
The junior at the University of International
Business and Economics hopes to work in a big city in Guangdong Province - one
of China's fastest developing regions - after graduating.
Another bottleneck to the region's development is
related to the already high and climbing tuitions being charged for higher
education and the increasing unemployment levels of college students, as Cheng
Su, an NPC deputy from Northwest China's Qinghai Province, has put forward in
her proposal.
"The incomes of farmers in our region are less
compared with the average level of the country. To send a child for further
education, a lot of rural families have to spend their lifelong savings or go
into debt," said Cheng, chief secretary of the Qinghai Democratic League
Committee.
Farmers in the dozen western provinces and autonomous
regions earned an average per capita annual income of 1,817 yuan (US$220) in
2003, much lower than the nation's average for farmers of 2,622 yuan (US$317).
In contrast, almost all universities and colleges in
the country raised tuitions by more than 10 per cent yearly on average between
1998 and 2000.
(Source: China Daily) |