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Foreword
China is the
largest developing country in the world, its population making up about 22
percent of the earth's total. For quite a long time in the past, China was
bedeviled by poverty, for various reasons.
Since the founding of the People's Republic of
China in 1949, and especially since the end of the 1970s, when China
introduced the policy of reform and opening to the outside world, the
Chinese Government, while devoting considerable efforts to all-round
economic and social development, has implemented nationwide a large-scale
program for development-oriented poverty relief in a planned and organized
way. With the main objective of helping poverty-stricken people to solve
the problem of food and clothing, this program has gone a long way toward
alleviating poverty. Between 1978 and 2000, the number of poverty-stricken
people without enough to eat and wear in the rural areas decreased from
250 million to 30 million, and the proportion of poverty-stricken people
in the total rural population dropped from 30.7 percent to about three
percent. The strategic objective set by the Chinese Government for
enabling all poverty-stricken people in rural areas to have enough to eat
and wear by the end of the 20th century has basically been
realized.
The following is an introduction to China's
development-oriented poverty relief for the rural
areas:
I.The Course and Achievements of the Aid-the-Poor
Program
Since the founding of New China, the
Chinese Government has spared no effort to develop production and
eliminate poverty. However, in the strict sense, the help-the-poor program
was put forward and implemented on a large scale only after the initiation
of the reform and opening-up. From 1978 to 2000, this program largely
underwent the following three stages:
The First Stage: Structural Reform
Promotes Poverty Relief (1978-1985)
In 1978, the poverty-stricken population numbered
250 million, making up 30.7 percent of the total rural population,
according to the poverty standard designated by the Chinese Government.
There were many causes giving rise to such a large number of
poverty-stricken people, of which the main one was that the operation
system in agriculture did not suit the needs of the development of the
productive forces, so that peasants lacked the enthusiasm for production.
In this way, reform of the system became the main way to alleviate
poverty.
The reform that China started in 1978 was, first
and foremost, a reform of the land management system, i.e., replacing the
collective management system of the people's commune with the household
contract responsibility system. This change of the land system kindled the
peasants' real enthusiasm for labor, thus greatly liberating the
productive forces and improving the land output. Meanwhile, many other
reforms, such as gradually relaxing control over the prices of
agricultural products and devoting major efforts to developing township
enterprises, opened new ways for solving the problem of poverty in the
rural areas. These reforms accelerated the development of the national
economy, and conveyed benefits on the poverty-stricken people in three
ways-raising the prices of agricultural products, transforming the
agricultural production structure and orienting it toward higher added
value, and employing rural laborers in non-agricultural sectors, thus
enabling impoverished people to shake off poverty and become well-off and
greatly alleviating poverty in the rural areas.
According to statistics, from 1978 to 1985 grain
output per capita increased by 14 percent in the countryside, cotton by
73.9 percent, oil-bearing crops by 176.4 percent, and meat by 87.8
percent; the net income per peasant grew by 3.6 times; the number of
poverty-stricken people with problems feeding and clothing themselves
decreased from 250 million to 125 million, to shrink to 14.8 percent of
the total population in the rural areas; and the number of
poverty-stricken people went down by 17.86 million annually on
average.
The Second Stage: Large-scale
Development-oriented Poverty Relief Drive (1986-1993)
In the mid-1980s, the economy of the overwhelming
majority of the rural areas in China, stimulated by the policy of reform
and opening-up and relying on their own advantages, grew by leaps and
bounds, but a small number of areas still lagged behind somewhat because
of economic, social, historical, natural and geographical conditions. The
disparity-economic, social and cultural-between the poverty-stricken areas
and other areas, especially that between the poverty-stricken areas and
the coastal advanced areas in the east, gradually widened. The uneven
development in the Chinese countryside became marked. Quite a number of
low-income people could not meet their basic needs for subsistence.
To further strengthen poverty relief, the Chinese
Government has adopted a series of important measures since 1986, such as
setting up special help-the-poor work units, allocating special funds,
formulating special favorable policies, thoroughly reforming the
traditional relief-type approach, and putting forward the
development-oriented poverty reduction policy. Since then, the Chinese
Government has set in motion a nationwide development-oriented poverty
reduction drive in a big and planned way, and China's help-the-poor work
has entered a new historical period. Thanks to the efforts made over the
past eight years, the net income per peasant in the poverty-stricken
counties to which the Chinese Government had attached special importance
increased from 206 yuan in 1986 to 483.7 yuan in 1993; the number of the
rural poor dropped from 125 million to 80 million, with an annual decrease
of 6.4 million on average, and an average annual decrease rate of 6.2
percent; and the proportion of poverty-stricken people in the total rural
population went down from 14.8 percent to 8.7 percent.
The Third Stage: Tackling Key
Problems of Poverty Relief (1994-2000)
Along with the deepening of the rural reform and
the constant strengthening of development-oriented poverty relief, the
number of the poverty-stricken people has shrunk year by year; great
changes have taken place in the features of poverty; and the distribution
of the poverty-stricken population shows obvious geographical
characteristics, i.e. most poverty-stricken people live in central and
western China, in the barren rocky mountain area of southwest China, the
arid Loess Plateau in northwest China and the impoverished Qinling and
Daba mountain areas (which suffer from rugged terrain, a shortage of
arable land, poor transportation conditions and serious soil erosion), and
the frigid Qinghai-Tibet Plateau. The main factors behind poverty are
adverse natural conditions, weak infrastructure and backward social
development.
Marked by the promulgation and implementation of
the Seven-Year Priority Poverty Alleviation Program (a program designed to
lift 80 million people out of absolute poverty in the period of seven
years from 1994 to 2000) in March 1994, China's development-oriented
poverty-relief work entered the stage of tackling the key problems. The
Seven-Year Priority Poverty Alleviation Program clearly stipulated that
China should concentrate human, material and financial resources, mobilize
the forces of all walks of life in society and work hard to basically
solve the problem of food and clothing of the rural needy by the end of
2000. It was the first action program for development-oriented poverty
reduction with clear and definite objectives, targets, measures and a time
limit.
For three years running (1997-1999), China solved
the problem of food and clothing for eight million people a year-a record
high in the 1990s. By the end of 2000, the basic objectives of the
Seven-Year Priority Poverty Alleviation Program had been realized by and
large.
Thanks to the arduous and unremitting efforts in
the past more than two decades, China has made tremendous achievements in
its drive to assist with the development of the poor areas.
-The problem of food and clothing for more than 200
million rural poor has been solved. The number of poverty-stricken people
in rural areas with problems obtaining sufficient food and clothing
decreased from 250 million in 1978 to 30 million in 2000; and the
impoverishment rate there decreased from 30.7 percent to about three
percent. Of this, the number of poverty-stricken people in the
impoverished counties to which the Chinese Government gave priority in its
poverty alleviation efforts decreased from 58.58 million in 1994 to 17.1
million in 2000, involving mainly the destitute people living in areas
with adverse natural conditions, a small number of people receiving social
security assistance and some handicapped people.
-Production and living conditions have remarkably
improved. During the 15 years from 1986 to 2000, 99.15 million mu (one mu
= 1/15 ha) of basic farmland was constructed in poverty-stricken rural
areas, and the problem of drinking water for more than 77.25 million
people and more than 83.98 million draught animals were solved. By the end
of 2000, 95.5 percent of the administrative villages in the
poverty-stricken areas had electricity, 89 percent were accessible by
road, 69 percent had postal service, and 67.7 percent could be reached by
telephone.
-Economic development has been speeded up
remarkably. During the implementation of the Seven-Year Priority Poverty
Alleviation Program, the agricultural added value of the poverty-stricken
counties to which the Chinese Government gave priority in poverty
alleviation went up by 54 percent, with an average annual growth rate of
7.5 percent; their industrial added value grew by 99.3 percent, with an
average annual growth rate of 12.2 percent; their local financial revenue
almost doubled, with an average annual growth rate of 12.9 percent; grain
output rose by 12.3 percent, with an average annual growth rate of 1.9
percent; and the net income per peasant increased from 648 yuan to 1,337
yuan, with an average annual growth rate of 12.8 percent.
-Social undertakings have developed quickly. The
hitherto-rapid population growth in the poverty-stricken areas has been on
the whole put under control, and the population's natural growth rate has
decreased. The conditions for running schools have improved, and
remarkable progress has been made in the work for basically popularizing
nine-year compulsory education and that for basically eliminating
illiteracy among the young and middle-aged. Of the 592 poverty-stricken
counties to which the state gives priority in poverty relief, 318 have
attained the aforementioned two objectives. Both vocational and adult
education has progressed at seven-league strides, thus effectively
improving the quality of workers. The town and township hospitals in most
of the poor areas have been revamped or rebuilt. As a result, the shortage
of doctors and medicines has been alleviated. A large number of practical
agrotechniques have been popularized, and the level of scientific farming
has improved remarkably. Ninety-five percent of administrative villages in
poor areas can receive radio and TV programs; the cultural life of the
people in these areas has improved; and their mental outlook has changed
tremendously.
-Some poverty-stricken areas which lie in vast,
contiguous stretches have solved the problem of food and clothing as have
the Yimeng, Jinggang and Dabie mountain areas, southwest Fujian and other
old revolutionary base areas. Great changes have taken place in some
remote mountain areas and areas inhabited by ethnic minority people.
Dingxi Prefecture in Gansu Province and Xihaigu Prefecture in the Ningxia
Hui Autonomous Region, once known as the "poorest places on earth," have
vastly improved their infrastructure facilities and basic production
conditions after many years of effort, and their poverty-stricken state
has been greatly alleviated.
II.Policy Guarantee for the Aid-the-Poor Program
The poverty of China's rural areas is a
problem that arose over long years in the past. Impoverished regions in
China are characterized mainly by a large area and population sunk in
poverty. Based on its understanding of the basic national conditions,
especially the reality of the poverty-stricken areas and people, the
Chinese Government has formulated a policy for development-oriented
poverty alleviation that conforms to the reality in China. It sets mainly
solving the problem of food and clothing of the rural poor as its basic
objective and central task in this regard, starting from the most urgent
problems, acting according to its capability, giving priority to key
areas, and advancing step by step.
Defining the Standard of Poverty in
Conformity with the National Conditions
China is a developing country with a large
population, a meager heritage and an underdeveloped economy, especially in
the rural areas. In terms of the poverty-stricken areas in China, the
underdevelopment is mainly reflected in the following: First, weak
infrastructure. In the western region, where most of these areas are
located, although the territory is over two-thirds of the nation's total,
the proportions of railways, highways and civil aviation facilities are
relatively low. Second, a rapidly growing population, and the low level of
education, public health and other basic social services. In contrast to
the backward economy, the poverty-stricken areas are usually noted for
their rapidly growing populations. Due to the poor conditions for running
schools and backward education facilities, a great number of school-age
children are unable to go to school or obliged to discontinue their
studies, and the illiteracy rate of the young and middle-aged is high.
These areas are also characterized by a very low level of health care
work. Third, poor agricultural production conditions, low revenue, and
seriously inadequate public input. In 1986, the per-capita motive power of
agricultural machinery in the counties on the state's priority poverty
relief list accounted for only 50 percent of the national average. In
1993, the per-capita revenue in these counties was 60 yuan, only about 30
percent of the national average.
In accordance with the above-mentioned actual
conditions, it is necessary to fix a realistic standard of poverty for
China's help-the-poor work. The earliest standard was calculated by the
relevant government departments in 1986, on the basis of the
investigations of the consumption expenditures of 67,000 rural households,
i.e., the standard of 206 yuan in per-capita net income in rural areas in
1985. It was equivalent to 300 yuan in 1990 and 625 yuan in 2000.
China's standard of poverty is the standard of the
lowest expense to maintain one's basic subsistence. It can guarantee the
basic living needs of the rural poor in China and, therefore, is an
objective standard and also one that conforms to the reality in
China.
Defining the Key Poverty-stricken
Counties to Be Aided by the State
To use poverty relief funds in a unified way, and
effectively aid the poor and needy, the Chinese Government has formulated
the standard of the key poverty-stricken counties to be aided by the
state, and identified a number of such counties.
The Chinese Government defined the standard of the
key poverty-stricken counties to be aided for the first time in 1986: the
counties with a net yearly income of less than 150 yuan per peasant in
1985. Subsequently, the standard had been readjusted in keeping with the
economic development, especially the constant improvement of the economic
conditions of the poverty-stricken areas. The readjusted standard in 1994
was less than 400 yuan in per-capita net income in 1992. So all those
counties originally on the priority list where the per-capita net income
had exceeded 700 yuan in 1992 were taken off the list. (According to a
typical calculation at the time, the problem of food and clothing of over
90 percent of the poverty-stricken people in the counties with the
per-capita net income of more than 700 yuan had been basically solved.)
According to this standard, 592 counties in 27 provinces, autonomous
regions, and municipalities directly under the Central Government were
listed as the key poverty-stricken counties to be aided in the Seven-Year
Priority Poverty Alleviation Program, covering over 72 percent of the
rural poor across the country. The series of policies and measures for
development-oriented poverty relief work adopted by the Central Government
in subsequent years were mainly centered on solving the problem of food
and clothing of the people in the counties on the state priority
list.
The state has driven forward the solution of
poverty in the rural poverty-stricken areas across the country through
concentrated and effective aid to the impoverished counties. The state has
explicitly demanded that all aid-the-poor funds must be used in the
poverty-stricken counties. In 1996, the Central Government further set the
minimum proportion of supportive poverty relief funds (30-50 percent) for
the provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities to guarantee the
local supportive funds to be used in the key counties.
Putting the Stress on the
Poverty-stricken Areas in the Central and Western Regions
It is an important strategic measure to favor the
central and western regions in China's development-oriented assistance to
the poverty-stricken. The regional features of China's economic
development are very outstanding. The eastern coastal areas take the lead
in economic development, taking full advantage of their own strengths. But
the central and western regions are relatively backward. Therefore,
China's rural poor are mostly concentrated in the central and western
regions, especially in the western region, living in scattered areas in
deserts, hills, mountains and plateaus. These regions are characterized by
the largest number of poor people, and the deepest degree and most
complicated structure of poverty. Of the 592 poverty-stricken counties
named by the Chinese Government on its priority poverty relief list in
1994, 82 percent are situated in the central and western regions.
The Chinese Government started to readjust the
regional structure of the allocation of the state poverty relief funds in
1994: adjusting the relief credit funds of the Central Government in the
coastal economically developed provinces to favor the worst provinces and
autonomous regions in the central and western regions, and earmarking the
new relief funds from the central budget only for poor areas in those
provinces and regions. Keeping the overall situation in mind, the state
has formulated preferential policies to actively promote a horizontal
union between the eastern and western regions, and the aid-the-poor
cooperation between similar departments of different institutions.
Over the past year, China has started to carry out
the strategy of large-scale development of the western region to
accelerate its development and narrow the gap in development between
regions. The state has arranged preferential construction projects of
infrastructural facilities, ecological environment and resource
development in the western region, steadily increasing its investments and
its financial transfer payments to the western region. All these have
contributed a great deal to promoting the development of the western
region and the solution of the food and clothing problem of the
poverty-stricken there.
Increasing Capital Input for Poverty
Reduction
Over the past 20 years, with the augmentation of
the state financial resources, the special aid-the-poor funds arranged by
the Chinese Government have constantly increased. In 2000, such funds
totaled 24.8 billion yuan, or 31 times as much as in 1980. The
accumulative total of such funds have reached over 168 billion yuan, of
which more than 80 billion yuan was from financial funds (including over
39 billion yuan of work-relief funds), and 88 billion yuan from credit
funds. Local governments have also increased the aid-the-poor funds
according to the proportion of supportive funds set by the Central
Government (30-50 percent since 1996).
The special aid-the-poor funds of the Chinese
Government mainly include two categories: financial and credit funds. The
former includes funds to support the development of the underdeveloped
areas, the new financial aid-the-poor funds, and work-relief funds. To
tighten the control of the aid-the-poor funds and improve their
utilization benefits, the State Council formulated the unified Measures on
the Management of the State Poverty Relief Funds in 1997, explicitly
providing for the objects and conditions of the aid, with special emphasis
on the requirement that these funds should be used complementarily
according to the overall objectives and requirements of the Seven-Year
Priority Poverty Alleviation Program, so as to form a concerted effort
enabling the funds to generate overall benefits. The aid-the-poor funds
from various channels should be mainly put into the following fields: The
financial funds are to be mainly used in the construction of basic
farmland, small irrigation works and country roads, providing drinking
water for people and livestock, technical training and the popularization
of practical agrotechniques; the credit funds are to be used in assisting
the poverty-stricken households in crop cultivation and aquiculture and
poultry raising projects to increase their incomes of the same year. At
the same time, the special relief departments at all levels are required
to strengthen the inspection and supervision of the management and use of
the funds. Auditing departments are required to strictly audit the use of
the funds and promptly deal with and problem once found. These measures
have played a key role in improving the utilization benefits of the
aid-the-poor funds and in realizing the objective of basically solving the
problem of food and clothing of the poor according to the required
schedule.
Formulating Preferential Policies to
Support the Development of the Poverty-stricken Areas and Peasant
Households
China's preferential policies for the
development-oriented assistance to the poverty-stricken cover two
aspects-helping the poor households to solve the problem of food and
clothing, and supporting the economic development of the poor
areas.
The preferential policies for helping the
development of the poverty-stricken peasant households include: Waiving
the mandatory state grain procurement quotas of households whose problem
of food and clothing has not been solved; appropriately prolonging the
utilization time limit of aid-the-poor loans and softening the terms of
mortgage and guarantee, according to the actual situation; and reducing or
remitting agricultural taxes and taxes on special farm produce according
to the relevant provisions of the regulations on agricultural
taxation.
The preferential policies to support the economic
development of the poverty-stricken areas include: Gradually strengthening
the financial transfer payments to poverty-stricken areas by the Central
Government, and establishing a secondary transfer payment system by the
relevant provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities to offer
financial support to those areas; remitting income tax for three years for
new enterprises in the poverty-stricken counties and enterprises
established there by people from the developed areas; and, according to
the principle of "he who benefits bears the expense," duly raising the
standards of the construction and maintenance funds in the reservoir
regions and earmarking these funds specially for solving the problem of
food and clothing of the reservoir regions' relocated people.
Carrying Out the Responsibility
System for Poverty Relief Work
To effectively implement the development-oriented
aid-the-poor work, the Chinese Government established a Leading Group of
the State Council for the Economic Development of Poverty-stricken Areas
in June 1986 (renamed Leading Group of the State Council for
Development-oriented Poverty Relief in 1993), to be responsible for the
organization, direction, coordination, supervision and examination of the
work in this regard. The governments of some provinces, autonomous
regions, municipalities, prefectures (cities) and counties have also
established corresponding organizations in charge of the local poverty
reduction drive.
China practices the level-by-level responsibility
system, with the provincial authority as the main player, in its
administrative leadership of the poverty reduction work. The provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities, especially provinces and autonomous
regions with large numbers of poverty-stricken areas, have put
development-oriented poverty relief high on their agendas, and formulated
concrete local implementation plans in line with the state's poverty
relief program. The principal leaders of the provinces, autonomous regions
and municipalities are required to personally supervise the work and
assume overall responsibility. The Central Government issues the relief
funds in one lump sum to the provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities at the beginning of every year, and accords the "four
assignations" (of funds, powers, tasks and responsibilities) to the
provinces, (autonomous regions and municipalities). All the funds assigned
to the provinces are to be arranged and used by the people's government at
the provincial level, which shall organize the relevant departments to
plan and implement the development projects.
Strengthening the Building of the
Primary Organizations
The rural primary organizations in China have an
important role to play in mobilizing and organizing the people to
participate in the development-oriented poverty reduction work aimed at
reshaping their own destiny. The Chinese Government has stressed improving
the rural organizations at the village level in its poverty reduction
drive, in order to enhance the degree of self-organization of the peasant
households and guide them to bear an active part in the drive. In the past
year, the Chinese Government has vigorously carried out the direct
election system of villagers' committees in rural areas, so that people
who are really supported by the masses and are able to lead them to shake
off poverty can be elected as village cadres according to the principle of
openness, fairness and justice. At the same time, a policy has been
strictly carried out, whereby village affairs, such as revenue and
expenditure, the distribution and use of the poverty relief funds, and the
conclusion and alteration of contracts are left open to the villagers for
their examination and supervision.
III.Major Contents and Channels of the Aid-the-Poor Program
In carrying out its aid-the-poor program, the
Chinese Government has persistently centered its efforts on economic
construction, developing the productive forces of poverty-stricken areas,
and combining development with relief. It aims at helping the rural poor
to shake off poverty through various ways and channels, and by adopting
comprehensive coordinative measures.
Adhering to the Policy of
Development-oriented Poverty Alleviation
Providing development-oriented aid to the poor is a
reform of and adjustment to the old, traditional way of dispersed relief,
forming the core and basis of the Chinese Government's aid-the-rural-poor
policy. Adhering to the policy of development-oriented aid means centering
efforts on economic construction, supporting and encouraging cadres and
ordinary people in poor areas to improve their production conditions,
exploit local resources, develop commodity production, and strengthen
their ability to accumulate funds and develop by themselves.
The policy of development-oriented aid mainly
consists of the following five aspects: First, advocating and encouraging
the spirit of self-reliance and hard work, and helping poor peasant
households overcome the common attitude of "waiting for, relying on and
requesting" aid. Second, considering that the poor areas are weak in
infrastructure and capability for defense against natural disasters, the
state encourages and supports poor peasant households to put labor into
the construction of infrastructure, such as farmland, irrigation works and
highways, by arranging necessary work-relief funds, so as to improve the
conditions for developing production. Third, the state provides
concessional loans for special aid items at discounted interest, and
formulates preferential policies, centering on helping the
poverty-stricken areas and peasant households develop market-oriented crop
cultivation, aquiculture and poultry raising and corresponding processing
industries, so as to increase production and incomes. Fourth, conducting
training in advanced practical agrotechiques, in order to improve poor
peasant households' sci-tech and cultural levels, and strengthening their
ability to develop by themselves. Fifth, combining development-oriented
aid with soil and water conservation, environmental protection and
ecological construction, implementing the strategy of sustainable
development, and helping poor areas and peasant households enhance their
ability to make further progress.
Bringing Aid Within the Reach of
Individual Villages and Households
Since the beginning of the 1990s, considering the
reality of the poverty-stricken areas, China has paid special attention to
making aid accessible to individual villages and households, as an
important measure. The state has also used the individual household as the
basic unit in quantifying the various indices for solving the poor peasant
households' problem of food and clothing.
China has developed many effective ways in the
practice of work in this regard: First, assigning individual households to
cadres, which means organizing cadres at all levels to form a "one helps
one" team with individual poor peasant households, and making clear the
cadres' duties in this respect by signing a responsibility contract or
through other ways. Second, households raise their incomes through the
help of economic entities, which means realizing a benign circle of
production, supply and marketing of agricultural products by encouraging
enterprises to cooperate with peasant households in setting up bases for
producing or processing agricultural products. Third, development through
relocation, whereby poor households are persuaded to move from their
native places, where production and living conditions are exceptionally
bad, to places with better conditions, so as to help lift them out of
poverty. Fourth, encouraging all social sectors to aid poor peasant
households.
One of the key measures for making aid accessible
to individual households is providing small-amount credit loans. Having
learned from the aid-the-poor experiences of other countries and
international organizations, the Chinese Government has achieved good
results in providing poor households with small-amount credit loans. By
1999, a total of three billion yuan had been loaned to over 2.4 million
poor peasant households. At the same time, China has primarily
standardized the experimentation with and promotion of small-amount credit
loans, and has entered the new stage of enlarging the involved population,
as well as the scale.
Aiding the Poor with Technology and
Education
In 1986, in accordance with the state's general
strategy and requirements in poverty relief, relevant authorities of the
Chinese Government proposed the aim, measures and implementation methods
of aiding the poor with technology. In 1996, they formulated an Outline of
the National Plan for Aiding the Poor with Technology (1996-2000),
strengthening the policy guidance for aid along this line.
In order to further enhance the ability of
poverty-stricken areas to fight poverty, the Chinese Government has
provided special funds for aiding the poor with technology, which have
been used for introducing, testing, demonstrating and promoting improved
seed strains and advanced practical technologies, and for conducting
technological training. Since 1995, the State Education Commission and the
Ministry of Finance have jointly implemented the National Project of
Compulsory Education in Poor Areas, through which over 10 billion yuan has
been provided for all state-designated poor counties, some
province-designated poor counties, old revolutionary base areas and ethnic
minority areas, to help them institute the national nine-year compulsory
education.
The Chinese Government encourages institutions of
higher learning and scientific research institutes to promote advanced
practical agrotechniques in poor areas, and has organized scientific and
technological personnel and research institutions to teach in poor areas
or promote agrotechniques in poor townships or villages. These measures
have effectively changed the backward modes of production in these areas,
increased the yield of farmland, and swiftly raised peasants' incomes. In
the past 15 years, the Ministry of Science and Technology has sent, by
turnstile count, 30,000 technicians to poor areas, implemented 580 model
projects of aiding the poor with technology, set up 1,500 technological
demonstration centers, solved over 200 key technological problems, and
promoted over 2,000 suitable techniques in poor areas.
Mobilizing and Organizing All Social
Sectors to Participate in Aiding the Poor
Based on the uniform requirements of the Central
Government, to solve the food and clothing problem of the impoverished
population as soon as possible, and in accordance with the actual
conditions of the poor areas, government departments have borne an active
part in the development-oriented poverty reduction drive. They have drawn
up specific implementation plans for their own technological aid projects,
employing a series of favorable policies to help poor areas to develop and
poor people to shake off poverty. Making full use of their own advantages,
these departments have contributed to the development and construction in
poor areas by favoring them in providing funds, materials and
technology.
Since the mid-1980s, more and more units and
organizations have participated in development-oriented aid-the-poor work,
including central government organs, enterprises and institutions,
non-Communist parties and mass organizations, and the scale has been
steadily enlarged. Each department or organization has a specific target
of aid and definite responsibilities, keeping up its aid until the aided
have shaken off poverty. By the end of 2000, the number of such units and
organizations had reached 138, involving over 3,000 cadres, 4.4 billion
yuan in direct investment, and 10.5 billion yuan in funds from domestic
and overseas sources.
The provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities, and the poor areas themselves have put energetic efforts
into the poverty reduction work in specific areas. From 1995 to 1999,
about 46,000 cadres were sent to do aid-the-poor work in poor counties and
villages; as much as 8.762 billion yuan worth was directly invested, both
in cash and in kind; a total of 10.3 billion yuan in support funds was
derived from other sources; over 20,000 aid projects were launched; and
over 13,000 technicians and nearly 7,000 items of technology were
introduced.
In addition, social organizations, non-governmental
organizations and private enterprises have actively initiated or
participated in a wide spectrum of aid-the-poor activities, such as the
Hope Project, Cause of Glory, Aid-the-Poor Through Culture, Happiness
Project, Spring Buds Program, Young Volunteers' Project of Supporting
Education in Poor Areas in Relays, and Poor Peasant Households'
Self-Support Project. A project aimed at helping children from poor
families to go to school, the Hope Project has received a total donation
of nearly 1.9 billion yuan from both home and abroad since its
inauguration in 1989, with which to fund the establishment of 8,355 Hope
schools and help nearly 2.3 million children to go to school.
Cooperation of the Eastern and
Western Regions in the Aid-the-Poor Work
In order to speed up the pace of eliminating
poverty in the western region, China has adopted the idea of getting the
more-developed provinces and municipalities in the east to support the
development of their western counterparts. This scheme is carried out as
follows: Beijing helps Inner Mongolia; Tianjin helps Gansu; Shanghai helps
Yunnan; Guangdong helps Guangxi; Jiangsu helps Shaanxi; Zhejiang helps
Sichuan; Shandong helps Xinjiang; Liaoning helps Qinghai; Fujian helps
Ningxia; and the cities of Dalian, Qingdao, Shenzhen and Ningbo help
Guizhou. Based on the principles of "taking advantages of each other's
strengths, mutual benefit, long-term cooperation and common development,"
the cooperating parties have joined efforts in all aspects and at multiple
levels, including cooperation between enterprises, project aid, and
personnel exchange. Such cooperation between the eastern and western
regions focuses on improving the production conditions and ecological
environments in the poor areas as well as solving the food and clothing
problem in these areas. Following the laws of the market economy, making
full use of science and technology, and mobilizing all social forces,
various forms of economic cooperation have been conducted, while efforts
are being made to realize more such cooperation.
In the recent year, nearly 2.14 billion yuan-worth
of donated funds and materials have been provided by the governments of 13
provinces and municipalities and various social sectors in the east; 5,745
project agreements have been signed; investments of over 28 billion yuan
have been agreed upon, of which over four billion yuan has already been
invested; and 517,000 workers have been transferred from the poor areas.
The eastern and western regions have also cooperated in cadre exchange,
personnel training, establishing schools, building basic farmland and
highways, easing the shortage of drinking water for people and livestock,
and so on. Since 1992, the State Education Commission and State Ethnic
Affairs Commission have organized the more developed provinces and
municipalities to support education work in the poor areas and areas
inhabited by ethnic minorities, building or rebuilding 1,400 primary and
secondary schools, helping nearly 40,000 children to go to school, and
training 16,000 primary and secondary school teachers.
Aiding the Poor by Encouraging
Migration
The state encourages and supports poor peasant
households to move out of areas with extremely difficult living conditions
to more favorable areas, which is a new way to solve their food and
clothing problem. The Chinese Government has stressed that the poor
population migrating voluntarily, in addition to enjoying the state's
preferential aid-the-poor policies, should be helped by local governments
through their specific measures and preferential terms, to guarantee that
each migrating household's food and clothing problem is solved. This work
has been undertaken according to the principles of migration by free will,
resettlement in the nearest possible areas, acting within the limit of
resources, and the provision of appropriate subsidies.
The major methods of aiding the poor by migration
include: First, governments subsidize the poor households for migrating
and resettling near their relatives or friends. Second, governments
establish migrants' settlements, and make sure that their food and
clothing problem is solved without damaging the ecological environment
around the settlements. Third, the migrants are allowed to keep their old
homes until the new settlements are well in shape for stable production
and habitation. In the recent year, about 2.6 million of the poor have
been relocated in various ways and through various channels, among whom
2.4 million have already settled down. The total poor population that
needs to migrate has shrunk from 7.5 million to about five million.
Transferring Labor from Poor
Areas
To increase the chances of employment and the
income of workers in poor areas, the state encourages and organizes the
transfer of labor from areas favorable for such transfer. Such labor
transfer will not only increase the employment and income of workers from
the poor areas, but, more importantly, it will also enable these people to
learn new technologies, life-styles and working methods from the places
where they work, to broaden their outlook, increase their self-confidence
and improve their ability to develop independently. Many migrant workers
from the western region have become envoys for spreading in the western
region the modes of production, life-styles, culture and technologies from
the more developed eastern region. In Sichuan Province, there are over
eight million workers employed outside the province each year, ranking
first in the country, and every year they send about 20 billion yuan back
to their native places.
Combining Poverty Reduction with
Eco-environmental Protection and Family Planning
While developing the poor areas, the Chinese
Government pays close attention to the protection of the ecological
environment, and encourages peasants to develop ecologically-and
environmentally-friendly agriculture. Poverty reduction by reliance on
science and technology has helped to change the previous way of production
by indiscriminate means at the expense of the ecology in poor areas, and
gone a long way toward promoting sustainable development in these
areas.
The large quantity, high growth and low quality of
the population in the poor areas have seriously handicapped economic and
social development, the efforts to solve the food and clothing problem,
and the peasants' attempts to shake off poverty and get rich. The Chinese
Government specially emphasizes changing the people's ideas on the family
in the poor areas, and encourages them to closely adhere to the national
family planning policy. The combination of family planning with poverty
reduction has produced important effects on the coordinated development of
the population, economy and society and the sustainable development of the
impoverished areas.
Promoting International Exchange and
Cooperation in Aid-the-Poor Work
The Chinese Government carries out its aid-the-poor
program mainly by its own efforts, at the same time paying attention to
exchange and cooperation with the international community in this sphere
of endeavor. The Chinese Government believes that promoting such exchange
and cooperation will not only help speed up the solving of the food and
clothing problem of its own poor population, but it will also help raise
the general level of China's aid-the-poor work by learning from the
international community its long years of experience and successful
methods in aiding the poor. Since the 1990s, the Chinese Government has
actively studied the international anti-poverty experience, and
continuously widened its cooperation with international organizations in
work in this particular field, in which it has made obvious
progress.
The World Bank was the first international body to
cooperate with the Chinese Government in aid-the-poor work, and has made
the largest investment so far. The three-stage aid-the-poor loan project
jointly carried out by the World Bank and China in the southwestern areas,
the Qinling and Daba mountain areas and the western region has involved a
total of 610 million US dollars, covering nine provinces and autonomous
regions, 91 poverty-stricken counties and over eight million poor people.
In July 1995, the Southwestern China-World Bank Loan Project started in
the 35 state-designated poorest counties in Yunnan and Guizhou provinces
and the Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region. Of the total investment of 4.23
billion yuan, 247.5 million US dollars were in the form of loans from the
World Bank; the Chinese Government provided a supporting fund of 2.18
billion yuan. This project mainly involved mega-agriculture,
infrastructure, development of secondary and tertiary industries, labor
service export, education, health care and poverty monitoring. The project
is expected to eventually solve the food and clothing problem of 3.5
million needy people. This inter-province, inter-industry comprehensive
aid project is the largest of its kind in China, and one that has made use
of the largest amount of foreign funds so far. Having progressed smoothly,
the project is currently in its phase-out period.
In addition, some other countries, international
organizations and non-governmental organizations have also conducted a
wide range of cooperation with China in aid-the-poor work. The United
Nations Development Program has carried out some aid and research projects
in China. Other governments and organizations that have successfully
carried out aid-the-poor projects in China include the European Union, the
governments of Great Britain, the Netherlands and Japan, the German GTZ,
the Asian Development Bank, the Ford Foundation, the CARE of Japan, the
Japan Bank for International Cooperation, the World Vision International,
and the Hong Kong Oxfam.
IV.The
Aid-the-Poor Program for the Special Groups Among the Impoverished
Ethnic minorities, the disabled and women are
special groups among China's impoverished rural population. The Chinese
Government pays great attention to poverty alleviation work for these
special groups, adopting effective measures to help them get rid of
poverty together with other impoverished people.
The Poverty Alleviation Program for
Ethnic Minorities and Minority Areas
China is a multi-ethnic country. Restricted by
historical, social and natural conditions, the economic and social
development of many ethnic minority areas is backward. According to
statistics, by 1994 the impoverished parts of the ethnic minority areas
were mainly located in western China, including five autonomous regions,
20 autonomous prefectures and 49 autonomous counties. Among the 348 ethnic
minority autonomous counties across the country, 257 were poverty-stricken
counties given priority in aid. The Chinese Government lays stress on
anti-poverty work in the impoverished parts of the ethnic minority areas
and extends to these areas special preferential policies and
measures.
Giving special treatment to ethnic minorities,
raising the standard for relief and aiding more poverty-stricken minority
areas. In 1986, the relief standard set by the state for the poor counties
on its priority list was less than 150 yuan in the peasants' income per
capita in 1985, whereas for autonomous counties, the standard was less
than 200 yuan. For the impoverished autonomous counties (banners) in
pastoral areas and semi-agricultural and semi-pastoral areas, the standard
was less than 300 yuan and 200 yuan per peasant and herdsman,
respectively, between 1984 and 1986. In 1994, when the state set about
designating the poverty-stricken counties that it should attach greater
importance to, it also extended special attention to the ethnic minority
areas: Among the 592 impoverished counties on the state's priority list,
there were 257 ethnic minority counties, accounting for 43.4 percent.
Favoring ethnic minority areas in appropriating
funds from the central budget. To intensify the aid to ethnic minority
areas, the state not only favors Tibet and the other four autonomous
regions and western provinces with large ethnic minority populations such
as Yunnan, Guizhou and Qinghai in allocating aid-the-poor funds, but it
has also arranged special funds such as the "Ethnic Minority Development
Fund" to solve the special difficulties and problems of the ethnic
minorities and minority areas. According to statistics, from 1994 to 2000,
the state invested 43.253 billion yuan in the Inner Mongolia, Guangxi,
Tibet, Ningxia and Xinjiang autonomous regions, and Guizhou, Yunnan and
Qinghai provinces, accounting for 38.4 percent of the nation's total.
These included 19.415 billion yuan from the financial funds (including
12.722 billion yuan of work-relief funds), constituting 40 percent of the
nation's total; and 23.838 billion yuan in credit funds, constituting 37.8
percent of the nation's total. Over the past six years, the state and
local government have invested 1.22 billion yuan in Tibet for launching
many anti-poverty projects.
Thanks to the common efforts of all sectors of
society, especially the persistent hard work of the cadres and people of
the minority areas, the poverty-alleviation work has attained marked
achievements in the impoverished parts of the ethnic minority
areas.
-The impoverished population is shrinking
substantially and the impoverishment rate is decreasing sharply.
Statistics show that the impoverished populations of the five autonomous
regions and three provinces mentioned above declined from 20.86 million in
1995 to 11.85 million in 1999-a decrease of 9.01 million in four years.
Moreover, the impoverishment rate declined from 15.6 percent in 1995 to
8.7 percent in 1999-a decrease of 6.9 percentage points. Since the
Seven-Year Priority Poverty Alleviation Program was started in Tibet, with
clear aims in view the government has adopted a sequence of special
measures for poverty-alleviation. As a result, the situation of
long-standing poverty in the rural and pastoral areas of Tibet has changed
radically, and the impoverished population has decreased from 480,000 in
the early 1990s to just over 70,000.
-The peasants' incomes are increasing rapidly, and
their living conditions are improving. In the 232 poverty-stricken
counties included in the state's priority aid in the five autonomous
regions and three provinces with large ethnic minority populations, the
net income per capita of the peasants rose from 630 yuan in 1995 to 1,189
yuan in 1998-an increase of 88.7 percent, or 28.7 percentage points higher
than the average increase level of the total 592 impoverished counties
receiving the state's priority aid. From 1994 to 1999, the net income of
the peasants per capita in the 49 impoverished counties in Guangxi rose
from 606 yuan to 1,836 yuan, and the grain yield per capita rose from 310
kg to 380 kg, becoming the first among the ethnic minority areas to reach
the objectives of the Seven-Year Priority Poverty Alleviation Program. By
the end of 2000, the net income of the peasants and herdsmen per capita in
the 18 counties in Tibet receiving state priority aid had reached 1,316
yuan, approaching the nation's average. In Xinjiang, the settlement and
semi-settlement rate of the herdsmen rose from 49.5 percent in 1994 to 80
percent in 1999.
-Infrastructure facilities are improving remarkably
and social undertakings are developing steadily. According to incomplete
statistics, from 1994 to 1999, the five autonomous regions and three
provinces with large ethnic minority populations solved the problem of
drinking water for 21.635 million people and 29.347 million dranght
animals. A total of 26.265 million mu of basic farmland was developed, and
6.72 million mu of meadows were fenced in for livestock grazing. Also,
67,500 km of roads connecting counties, townships and villages were
constructed. By the end of 1999, all the townships in Guangxi were
connected by roads; some 95 percent of the villages in the 49
poverty-stricken counties were accessible by automobile; 95 percent of the
villages had access to electricity and TV programs; and 85 percent of the
villages had telephone lines. Besides, education, public health and other
social undertakings have developed rapidly in the impoverished parts of
the ethnic minority areas.
Aid to the Poverty-stricken
Disabled
The disabled form a special social group in
straitened circumstances. Currently, there are over 60 million disabled in
China, accounting for approximately five percent of the total population.
Of them, 80 percent live in the rural areas, and a large number live in
poverty due to their own disability and the influence of the external
environment. It is estimated that in 1992 there were about 20 million
impoverished disabled people in China. Among the disabled poor in the
rural areas, 30 percent lived in the 592 state-designated impoverished
counties. The Chinese Government has all along attached great importance
to and shown concern about poverty alleviation for the disabled, and has
adopted a series of effective measures in this regard:
-Making poverty alleviation for the disabled an
important part of the state's poverty alleviation program. The state makes
unified arrangements to implement poverty alleviation work for the
disabled. Both the Outline of the Work for the Disabled in China During
the Eighth Five-Year Plan Period and the Outline of the Work for the
Disabled in China During the Ninth Five-Year Plan Period approved by the
Chinese Government contain coordinated implementation schemes for poverty
alleviation for the disabled. In 1998, the state specially formulated the
Priority Poverty Alleviation Program for the Disabled (1998-2000) to
ensure comprehensive arrangements for poverty alleviation for the
disabled, fixing the objectives, tasks, methods, measures and policies for
work in this connection. The local governments at various levels also give
priority aid to the disabled, drawing up plans, implementing projects,
ascertaining responsibilities, and providing energetic manpower, financial
and material support.
-Offering special loans to alleviate poverty among
the disabled. In 1992, the state established a special rehabilitation and
poverty alleviation loan to aid the impoverished disabled. By 2000, 2.6
billion yuan had been loaned to such people. In the past year, great
efforts have been made to provide small-amount credit loans for individual
households and persons, which has become a major method of helping the
disabled shake off poverty. In Henan, Guizhou, Inner Mongolia, Yunnan,
Heilongjiang and ten other provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities, such loans have exceeded 70 percent.
-Strengthening the building of the poverty
alleviation service system of the China Disabled Persons' Federation at
the grassroots level to provide prompt and effective service for the rural
disabled. In March 1998, the Coordinating Committee for the
Disabled-related Work of the State Council issued the Decisions on
Strengthening the Building of the China Disabled Persons' Federation at
the Grassroots Level. Besides, six departments under the State Council,
including the Poverty Alleviation Office, have adopted the Measures for
the Implementation of the Development-oriented Poverty Alleviation
Projects for the Disabled in the Rural Areas (1998-2000), setting forth
the requirements in strengthening the building of the service system of
the China Disabled Persons' Federation at the grassroots level. Through
several years of efforts, by the end of 2000 some 80.2 percent of the
counties (cities and municipal districts) across the country had
established 2,238 county-level service centers for the disabled; and 60
percent of the total townships had set up 28,427 township-level service
centers. A grassroots poverty alleviation service system for the disabled
has taken initial shape in the countryside, providing an important
organizational guarantee for aiding the disabled.
-Choosing suitable poverty alleviation projects and
methods for the disabled. In view of the fact that the disabled have many
difficulties participating in productive labor, stress should be laid on
supporting economic sectors that can directly help tackle the food and
clothing problem for the poor disabled in the rural areas. Such sectors
include crop cultivation, aquiculture, poultry raising, handicrafts and
household sideline production; projects that meet the needs of the
development of the local market economy and coordinate with the local
pillar industries and are well suited to the characteristics of the
disabled; and projects with wide fund coverage and marked results for
individual households and closely related to direct income increase for
the impoverished disabled.
As a result of great efforts made, the number of
the disabled poor in China had dropped dramatically, as evidenced by the
fact that the problem of food and clothing had been solved for ten million
disabled in the previous ten years, leaving only 9.79 million still beset
by this problem by the end of 2000.
Aid for Poverty-stricken
Women
The Chinese Government has paid great attention to
helping rural women shake off poverty. The Seven-Year Priority Poverty
Alleviation Program of 1994 clearly stipulates that further efforts should
be made to mobilize the women of the poverty-stricken areas to take an
active part in the fight against poverty. In the past year, led and
encouraged by governments at all levels and organizations concerned, women
in poor rural areas have taken an active part in the campaign of "learning
culture and technology, and emulating each other in achievements and
contributions." Numerous women have been taught to read and write, and
some of them have undergone applied technology training and obtained the
title of agrotechnician, and are now playing leading roles in developing
productivity by reliance on science and technology in the poverty-stricken
areas. The biggest women's organization in China, the All-China Women's
Federation, has helped 3.47 million impoverished women out of poverty and
get rich by providing poverty alleviation services, conducting cultural
and technological training, facilitating small-amount credit loans,
organizing labor service transfer and mutual help, and initiating poverty
alleviation projects specially for women.
The state has mobilized all non-governmental
sectors to show concern for impoverished women and support social relief
activities for women in poverty-stricken areas. Such activities as the
Happiness Project to help impoverished mothers, the Spring Buds Program
for supporting girl dropouts in poverty-stricken areas and the Cistern
Project to aid women in the water-deficient areas of western China, have
played an active role in helping rural women to erase poverty quickly. By
May 2000, some 145 million yuan had been put into the Happiness Project,
helping 107,472 people and indirectly benefiting 483,000 people. By July
2000, the Spring Buds Program had raised 330 million yuan to help 1.05
million girl dropouts return to school.
V.The
Aid-the-Rural-Poor Program in the Early Period of the 21st Century
Alleviating and eliminating poverty remains a
long-term historical task for China. In order to quicken the pace of
solving the problem of poverty, which remains unsolved to a certain degree
in certain areas, a meeting on this issue was held in May 2001 by the
Central Government. An overall plan for aiding the poor in rural areas in
the first ten years of the 21st century was worked out. After the meeting,
the Chinese Government officially issued the Outline for Poverty
Alleviation and Development of China's Rural Areas (2001-2010), setting
out the objectives, tasks, guiding ideology, and policies and principles
for work in this regard in the coming ten years. The Outline is another
programmatic document following the Seven-Year Priority Poverty
Alleviation Program for guiding the poverty alleviation work in the rural
areas.
The development-oriented poverty alleviation drive
in rural China early in the 21st century is a rare historical opportunity,
but it still faces serious challenges and problems.
Favorable Conditions
China today is blessed with many favorable
conditions, some of them much more favorable than in the past, in its
poverty alleviation drive. Great attention has been paid to the work by
governments at various levels; support has been given by all sectors of
society; and the cadres and ordinary people of the poor regions are
working hard with one heart and one mind. These are the most important
conditions for guaranteeing the steady progress of the work. With regard
to the objective environment, we have the following favorable
conditions:
-A sound base has been laid for the poverty
alleviation work. After more than 20 years of hard work, the problem of
food and clothing of the impoverished population has been basically
solved; production and living conditions in poverty-stricken areas have
improved by a wide margin; the ability to withstand natural calamities and
develop production in those areas has been strengthened; and we have
accumulated a rich store of successful experiences and found out a number
of effective methods in the practice of the poverty relief work. All these
are helpful to the progress of our future work in this regard.
-The sustained growth of the economy in the future
will quicken the process of the work of poverty alleviation. Practice has
proved that economic growth is the key to solving the problem of poverty.
The coefficient of elasticity of the reduction of China's poverty-stricken
population and economic growth was -0.8 in the 1990s. That means that the
increase of one percentage point of the GDP will reduce the size of the
rural poor by 0.8 percent. In accordance with the state's economic
development plan, China's economy will score an annual increase of seven
percent in the coming five years. So there will be a further demand for
workers, some of whom will come from the poor areas. As a result, the
standard of living in those areas will be improved. At the same time,
along with the steady improvement of the comprehensive national strength,
the state will pour more resources into development and construction in
the poor areas, providing a sound material base for the development of
those areas.
-The economic restructuring is conducive to the
development of the poor areas. At this time when there has been an
increasingly fierce competition in both domestic and foreign markets,
China is devoting major efforts to adjusting and optimizing its industrial
structure. The developed regions, on the one hand, have quickened the pace
of upgrading their industries and energetically developing capital- and
technology-intensive industries. On the other hand, in order to improve
the competitiveness of their industries, they are transferring some
labor-intensive industries to the less-developed areas. The poor areas,
mostly situated in the central and western parts of China, have relatively
rich resources and cheap labor, which place them in a locationally
advantageous position to respond to such transference. It is fully
possible for the western region to import capital and technology, and
accept transferred industries, so as to improve their position in the
division of regional industries and quicken the change of local industrial
structure and economic development.
-The implementation of the large-scale development
strategy for the western region is also helpful for poverty alleviation
and will have a far-reaching influence on the reduction of the
impoverishment rate. The focus of the development strategy is on
quickening the construction of infrastructure, especially the building of
water conservancy, transportation and telecommunications facilities, and
the strengthening of eco-environmental protection and construction. During
the Tenth Five-Year Plan period (2001-2005), a large number of projects
will be undertaken in the western region. In addition, many preferential
policies for the development of the western region have been formulated by
the state, such as the increase of the percentage of foreign capital to be
used by the western region and special state bonds issued mainly for the
development of this region. The construction of a sequence of major
projects and the implementation of the preferential policies will lay a
good foundation for eliminating the backwardness of the poor areas in the
western region.
-Opening wider to the outside world will bring new
opportunities for the development of the poor areas. After China joins the
WTO, the markets of these areas will expand further and open wider to the
outside world, which will be favorable for the development of their
advantageous labor- and resource-intensive industries, bringing more
employment opportunities. Though the existing industries in those areas
may be adversely affected after China enters the WTO, in the long run this
will be good for the transfer of their workers and the export of their
labor-intensive products.
Difficulties and Problems
The main difficulties and problems for China in the
early period of the 21st century in the field of poverty alleviation are
as follows: First, though the income of the poverty-stricken people has
been obviously improved, the current standard for poverty relief in China
is very low. Second, restricted by unfavorable natural conditions, weak
social insurance system and their own poor comprehensive ability, the
people who now have enough to eat and wear may easily sink back into
poverty. Third, although the development-oriented poverty reduction drive
has greatly changed the poverty and backwardness of the vast impoverished
rural areas, there has been no qualitative change either in the basic
production and living conditions of the poverty-stricken peasant
households, or in the social, economic and cultural backwardness in those
areas. Fourth, because of its large population, China will face employment
pressure for a long period to come. This pressure is bound to adversely
affect the employment of the impoverished population, so much so that many
effective aid-the-poor measures will not play the roles they should play.
Fifth, people who still do not have enough to eat and wear generally live
in areas with adverse natural environments, a low level of social
development and underdeveloped social services, where the contrast between
input and result is very sharp.
Targets and Goals
The Chinese Government will persist in taking those
in impoverished areas who do not have enough to eat and wear as the first
to be helped. Though their number is not large, there are a lot of
difficulties in helping them get rid of poverty. At the same time, those
who have just enough to eat and wear should be helped steadily to shake
off poverty. Because their production and living conditions have not
basically changed and they are not strong enough to fight natural
calamities by themselves, these people will easily sink back into poverty
once struck by natural disasters. So our future task is to further help
those people become rich after they have shaken off poverty.
China's overall poverty alleviation goal from 2001
to 2010 is as follows: To help the small number of needy people without
enough to eat and wear attain that minimum standard of living as soon as
possible, and further improve the basic production and living conditions
of the poor areas and consolidate the results gained in this regard. At
the same time, the quality of life and comprehensive quality of the
poverty-stricken people shall be improved, and construction of
infrastructure facilities shall be speeded up in impoverished rural areas.
In addition, their eco-environment will be improved, and their social,
economic and cultural backwardness changed, so as to create the conditions
for a future comfortable life.
From 2001 to 2010, the Chinese Government will
concentrate its poverty alleviation efforts on the ethnic minority areas,
old revolutionary base areas, border areas and destitute areas in the
central and western regions. Some counties will be designated for special
help. The government will use its financial, material and human resources
in a concentrated way in the comparatively concentrated poor areas. A
unified plan will be drawn up, which will be carried out on a yearly
basis. The government will combine separate guidance with a comprehensive
approach in the work.
Ways and Means
The Chinese Government will adopt the following
ways and means in its poverty alleviation work up to 2010:
-Continuing to put the stress on crop cultivation
and aquiculture and poultry raising, and efforts will be concentrated on
helping the poor people to develop specialty and competitive products in
this field. With increasing the income of the poverty-stricken people as
the focal point, we shall optimize the varieties of products, improve
their qualities and increase their benefits by reliance on sci-tech
progress. In line with the principle of improving the eco-environment, the
protection and construction of the ecological environment will be
strengthened so as to achieve sustainable development. With the market as
the orientation, comprehensive investigation should be done concerning
products that are going to be put into production. Services in the fields
of information, technology and sales should be guaranteed in order to
ensure the increase of production and incomes.
-Promoting the industrialized operation of
agriculture. In line with the requirements for industrialized operation,
farm products with resources advantages and marketability should be
produced or planned and developed according to an integrated plan, so as
to develop a characteristic, regionally leading industry. Great efforts
will be made to develop "cooperation between farmers and companies" and a
made-to-order farming. Large and medium-sized agricultural products
processing enterprises capable of developing new markets should be guided
or encouraged to build raw material production bases in the poor areas and
provide serialized, pre-production, in-production and post-production
services for impoverished peasant households, so as to form an
industrialized operation featuring the integration of trade, industry and
agriculture and the coordinated management of production, supply and
sale.
-Increasing budgetary funds and loans for poverty
alleviation. The state will further increase the scale of work-relief
projects and, in line with the practical financial difficulties of the
poor areas, strengthen financial transfer payments and implement the
control of budgetary poverty relief funds with the household as the basic
unit. The increased relief loans shall be used for developing crop
cultivation, aquiculture, poultry raising, labor-intensive enterprises,
farm produce processing enterprises, market circulation enterprises and
infrastructure construction, which will help raise the incomes of the
poverty-stricken people. Small-amount credit loans will be extended in an
active and steady manner to help needy peasant households develop their
production.
-Improving the basic production and living
conditions of the poor areas. Construction of basic farmland,
infrastructure, environmental improvement projects and public service
facilities will be strengthened with the township or village as the basic
unit. By 2010, the drinking water problem for both people and livestock
will be basically solved in the key state-helped poor areas, and at the
same time efforts will be made to provide most of the administrative
villages with electricity, road access, and postal, telephone, radio and
TV links. In addition, hospitals will be built in most of the poor
townships, and clinics in most of the poor villages, so as to basically
control the main endemic diseases seriously affecting the life and
production of those areas.
-Improving the sci-tech and cultural qualities of
the masses in the poor areas. In order to help the peasants acquire
advanced and practical techniques, it is necessary to integrate
agriculture, science and education, make overall plans for general,
vocational and adult education, and run vocational and technical schools
and short-term training classes with clear aims in mind. The nine-year
compulsory education will be guaranteed in the poor areas, and the
attendance rate of school-age children will be further raised. The old
backward habits and customs will be changed, and a scientific and
civilized life-style will be promoted in those areas.
-Encouraging economic organizations with diverse
forms of ownership to assist with the development of the poor areas. The
Chinese Government will create a better policy and investment environment
to attract economic organizations with diverse forms of ownership to help
the economic development of the poor areas. Necessary support will be
given by the state to agricultural products processing enterprises that
meet the demands of the market and can upgrade their industries and help
increase the incomes of thousand and one households; resource-exploitation
enterprises that will give full play to the resource advantages of the
poor areas and improve their eco-environment; labor-intensive enterprises
that can provide employment for the surplus labor force in the poor areas;
and enterprises that can help the poor and needy solve the problem of
market circulation.
-Mobilizing the whole of society to assist with the
development of the poor areas. To enlist greater social involvement in
this sphere of endeavor, the state will mobilize society at large to take
part in the poverty alleviation drive, in addition to the resources
provided by the government. In accordance with the development-oriented
poverty reduction program, further efforts will be made to promote
counterpart cooperation between the eastern developed coastal region and
the poverty-stricken western region, enlarge the scale of the cooperation
and increase the momentum of the relief work. It is necessary to encourage
and guide non-governmental exchange and cooperation at different levels
and in diverse forms, especially cooperation for common development
between enterprises. It is also necessary to give play to the important
role of all social sectors in the development-oriented poverty reduction
efforts and actively create conditions for non-governmental organizations
to take part in or implement the government development projects in the
poor areas.
-Promoting international exchange and cooperation
in development-oriented poverty relief. We shall continue our efforts to
win aid projects from international organizations and developed countries.
In order to guarantee the smooth carrying out of these projects, the state
will increase the proportion of corresponding supportive funds
appropriately, or provide full-amount supportive funds if the local budget
is tight. In view of the local characteristics of the poor areas, measures
should be adopted to strengthen the management of foreign-aid projects. It
is necessary to work hard to improve the economic returns from
foreign-loan and other foreign-aid projects, and improve our capability to
repay the loans. It is also necessary to strengthen exchanges with
international organizations in development-oriented poverty relief, and
learn from the successful experience and effective measures introduced by
the international community in this sphere of endeavor, so as to improve
our poverty relief work and its overall benefits.
-Standardizing the work of development-oriented
poverty alleviation. The responsibility system has to be carried out
earnestly in this sphere of work. The provinces shall assume overall
responsibility, while the counties shall formulate concrete measures for
implementation in the villages and ensure that the individual households
benefit from the work. Cadre training and the building of the democratic
political power at the grassroots level in the poverty-stricken areas
shall be strengthened, so as to enhance the capabilities of the cadres and
organizations at the grassroots level in leading the people to get rid of
poverty and become well-off. The auditing of the poverty relief funds and
the relief-related statistical and supervisory work should be strengthened
and become a regular practice that should be persevered in for a long
period in the future. Poverty relief organs should be stable, and their
leading ability and ability of coordinated management in the poverty
relief work should be raised. With its steady deepening, the work for
development-oriented assistance to the poverty-stricken areas should be
standardized and institutionalized and gradually put into the orbit of the
legal system.
China is a developing country, and it has a long
way to go to shake off poverty. The basic solution of the problem of food
and clothing of the poverty-stricken population in rural areas is only the
result of one phase in our effort to accomplish this historic task.
Subsequently, it will still take a long period of hard work to enable the
people in the poor areas to first live a comfortable life and then a
well-off life. With the progress of the reform and opening-up and the
modernization drive and the steady increase of China's comprehensive
national strength, our development-oriented poverty reduction program for
the rural areas is bound to be crowned with new
success.
Information Office of the State
Council of the People's Republic of China
October 2001,
Beijing
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