BEIJING, Oct. 10 (Xinhua) -- Experts have backed the
decision by China's Communist Party (CPC) to prioritize the creation of a
harmonious society at its ongoing Sixth Plenary Session of the 16th Central
Committee.
"This is a major strategic move taken by the party to
build a fair and just society and attain sustainable social and economic
development," said Wu Zhongmin, a professor with the Party School of the CPC
Central Committee.
It is widely expected that the party's leadership
will take major decisions at the meeting on the building of a harmonious
society, including measures to promote social justice and reduce the wealth gap.
Measures are also expected to be announced to repair
damage caused by the reforms of health services, education and social security.
China's recent reforms in health and education have
been widely considered failures as they have resulted in soaring prices beyond
the reach of medium and lower-income groups.
"Soaring prices of medical services, housing and
education, combined with an inadequate social security network and rising
unemployment among university graduates, are making people increasingly anxious
about their futures," he said.
Khalid Malik, resident representative of the United
Nations Development Program in China, said China has "largely solved, in a
remarkably short period of time, the first set of challenges of economic
development; eliminating severe hunger, homelessness and outright deprivation."
He said it is only right that China should now
address a new set of challenges, correcting the imbalances that have arisen from
rapid economic growth.
China's economy has grown at an average rate of 10
percent over the last two decades since it started its reform and opening
policy.
But Wu said an equally striking fact is that China
has in the same period turned from one of the most egalitarian countries in the
world to a nation with one of the biggest wealth gaps.
In 2005, the average income of China's urban
residents was 3.23times that of rural residents. But the actual wealth gap is
much bigger when the difference in public services and social security is taken
into account.
Tang Min, chief economist of the Asian Development
Bank Resident Mission in China, warned that further widening of the wealth gap
may reduce the public's support for the party's reform and opening policy, and
may even lead to social turmoil.
Wu noted that the Chinese government has already
taken measures to reduce the wealth gap over the last few years. Measures
include the cancellation of agricultural tax collected from farmers, provision
of subsidies to grain producers, and increasing the minimum wage to benefit
millions of migrant workers.
The government is also considering a major overhaul
of the country's wage structure. According to estimates by Yang Yiyong, deputy
head of the institute of economics under the National Development and Reform
Commission, the overhaul will benefit 120 million people mainly from medium and
low income groups. Enditem