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BEIJING, SEPT. 8 -- The National Bureau of Statistics
vice director said he was "shocked" by the 10-year gap between the quality of
life of urban residents and farmers -- the dominant force of China's gigantic
1.3 billion population.
กก
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| Qiu Xiaohua, the deputy director of China's
Bureau of Statistics, was shocked by a 10-year gap between the quality of
life of urban residents and farmers. [baidu]
| กก"Generally speaking, the overall consumption
power of the huge farming population still lingers at the early 1990's stage of
their city counterparts. The gulf has yet to be bridged," Qiu Xiaohua, the
bureau's deputy director said at the ongoing "the 21st Century Forum" being held
in Beijing.
"It's not so beyond the imagination that, generally
speaking, China's city population are much better off than their rural
siblings," said a netizen speaking out on one of the nation's most popular news
portals, Sina. "We prefer concrete measures to better farmers' lives over
appalled officials. "
The income gap between city dwellers and farm workers
has widened on and on since the year 1997. During the seven years through 2004,
rural people's annual incomes per capita increased by 6.8 per cent to 2,936 yuan
(about US$350) on average, nearly a quarter of the income of urban people.
These scanty earnings have also dragged down the
education status in rural areas far behind cities, with farmers unable to send
their children to school. For instance, university graduates from the
countryside account for a mere 2.3 percent of the total number, Qiu noted.
Only 10 per cent of rural people are now under the
nation's social welfare umbrella for free medication, which, by contrast, covers
some 40 per cent of city residents.
The life of farmers who mainly feed themselves off of
what they grow has gotten even worse with the nation's persistent contractions
in its expenditures on agriculture. The money earmarked for the agriculture
development in 2003 shrank by nearly 7 per cent compared with that of 1978.
China has more than 800 million farmers, or nearly 60
per cent of its huge 1.3 billion population. Through last year, 26.1 million
rural people were still fighting against absolute poverty and 50 million were
living at the least sustainable level, officials estimate.
Such embattled living conditions for the nation's
vast farming population have long been under the spotlight as relative
administrations have spared no efforts to change the situation.
On the heels of the early 2005 annulment of
agriculture taxes, the Ministry of Education is now mulling an overall exemption
of education fees in underprivileged rural areas.
"Compulsory education will be completely free in the
countryside by the end of the year," Zhang Baoqi, vice minister of the ministry,
said on Aug. 29.
(Source: chinadaily.com.cn, by Echo Shan
)
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