BEIJING, April 7 -- Rural households in China spent an average of just
139.3 yuan (20.30 U.S. dollars) on entertainment last year, People's Daily
overseas edition reported.
Ministry of Agriculture statistics show each
household spent an average of 348 yuan (50.90 dollars) on cultural-related
services in 2008, but that 208.7 yuan (30.50 dollars) of this money was spent on
their children's education.
This means rural households spent the remaining money
on items like books or films for their personal entertainment.
This represents an increase of just 2 yuan on the
2007 data and the newspaper blamed the economic downturn.
In contrast, spending on entertainment in 2007 grew
by 25.6 yuan on the year before.
"My major entertainment is watching TV, and sometimes
folk art performances," said Ma Yichang, a farmer from Jiangzhuang village in
Shandong province.
"I did not buy a single book, or watch a movie last
year."
In Xichen village of Henan province only a few people
have access to newspapers and magazines and the Internet is beyond the reach of
most villagers. "There is no place to buy a newspaper here," a villager in his
50s said.
The man said he paid 5 yuan and traveled 25 km by bus
to another town simply to buy his grandson a reference book.
Neither village has a library or other cultural
facilities.
The lack of cultural services in rural areas has
presented opportunities for some businesses, including Books-on-the-go which
sells truck-loads of books to people in rural areas.
A few provinces and cities, including Yunnan and
Shaanxi provinces and Taiyuan and Shenyang cities, have allocated funds to build
libraries and other cultural centers.
(Source: China Daily)