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| 8% Chinese youth think narrowing wealth gap urgent |
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| www.chinaview.cn
2006-12-25 16:07:18
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BEIJING, Dec. 25 (Xinhua) -- More than 80 percent
Chinese youth feel China's widening wealth gap is "very serious" and must be
narrowed urgently, a survey has shown.
The survey, conducted by the China Youth Daily and leading portal website Sina.com, asked 10,250 Chinese aged 20 to 30, most with university degrees and a monthly salary of 1,000
to 3,000 yuan (125 to 375 U.S. dollars), about their views on China's yawning
wealth gap.
It shows 72 percent believe the gap can be felt
between the underprivileged and well-off and between rural migrant workers and
their bosses.
About 40 percent think the widening gap exists
between coastal city dwellers and residents of central and western regions,
between cities and countryside and between the social elite and the general
public, it shows.
Ninety-five percent believe a good education and
skills or a good command of foreign languages, to which Chinese have
traditionally attached much importance, will not necessarily bring wealth, says
the survey.
With a double-digit growth rate and the world's
fourth largest economy, China has been grappling with the disparity between the
haves and have-nots, with the per capita GDP of the richest province more than
ten times than of the poorest.
Statistics show the richest 10 percent of families
own more than 40 percent of all private assets, while the poorest 10 percent
share less than two percent of the total wealth.
The country's Gini Coefficient, a measure of the
wealth gap, is estimated to exceed 0.4, a level that could endanger economic and
social stability.
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