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China poverty alleviation, raising standard of living

Poor village in SW China finds its own way out of poverty
New China TV
Published on Jan 12, 2019

From an impoverished, isolated village in southwest China's Guizhou Province, Yanbo village has found its own way out of poverty by developing small and micro businesses.
 
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China makes headway in building ranks of rural teachers: report
Source: Xinhua| 2019-01-13 23:25:33|Editor: yan

BEIJING, Jan. 13 (Xinhua) -- China has made significant progress in building its ranks of teachers in rural areas, according to a report on the country's rural education released Sunday.

Issued by the research institute on rural education at the Northeast Normal University, the report was based on local statistics from 19 provinces and national statistical data.

The report showed that 95.26 percent of primary school teachers had junior college degrees or above nationwide in 2017, while that for rural areas stood at 93.80 percent; 84.63 percent of junior high school teachers nationwide had bachelor degree or above in 2017, while that for rural areas was 81.10 percent. The figures showed narrowing gap between urban and rural areas, the report said.

Subsidies specifically for rural teachers covered all of China's poverty-stricken areas for the first time ever in 2017, according to the report.

The report showed that in 2017, a total of 77,000 teachers were recruited from among graduates under a national program which was designed to recruit teachers for rural schools in the country's impoverished areas.

The report also featured a survey which showed that 83.46 percent of rural teachers were willing to continue to teach at rural schools.
 
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Jack Ma Rural Teacher Award recognizes 100 rural teachers

(China Daily) 07:59, January 14, 2019


The Jack Ma Rural Teacher Award ceremony was held in Sanya, South China's Hainan province, on Sunday.

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Jack Ma is surrounded by the award-winning rural headmasters in Sanya, Hainan province, January 13, 2019. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

Among those at the event, themed "Back to the Classroom", were Alibaba Group Chairman Ma, National Excellent Teacher Zhu Aichao, president of the Palace Museum Shan Jixiang, Olympic champion Hui Ruoqi, 100 rural teachers and 20 rural headmasters.

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Jack Ma greets rural teachers in Sanya, Hainan province, January 13, 2019. [Photo provided to chinadaily.com.cn]

At the award ceremony, plans for the rural boarding school model rooms Ma advocates will be released. Ma will continue to discuss the rural boarding school plan with 100 entrepreneurs.

Ma has awarded this prize to rural teachers every year in Sanya since 2015.

http://en.people.cn/n3/2019/0114/c90000-9537213.html
 
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People's Daily, China
4 hours ago

China vows to provide clean and safe drinking water in all rural areas by 2020 #ReformOpeningUp40thAnniv

As China pushes forward the battle against poverty, the campaign to provide safe and clean drinking water for all Chinese carries on, too, with officials vowing to finish the job by 2020.

Safe and clean drinking water used to be a big headache for many rural residents who relied solely on wells, whose water quality could be not strictly monitored and controlled. For the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15) period, a nationwide campaign was kicked off to provide safe and clean drinking water for over 300 million rural people via multiple water quality improvement projects in regions with water rich in fluoride and arsenic.

Starting in 2016 at the beginning of the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20) period, the Central Government invested 14.3 billion yuan in improving water quality, with total investments from local authorities topping 119.9 billion yuan to provide clean and safe water to another 164 million people in rural areas.

In 2018 alone, more than 78 million rural residents gained access to clean water and the penetration rate of tap water in rural areas has reached 81%.

At present, all the drinking water problems in villages in arsenic-rich regions, Schistosoma japonicum-affected areas and other affected areas have been dealt with. Water quality has been improved in 70,000 fluorosis-rich areas, which made up 93.6% of all the affected regions.

According to the Ministry of Water Resources, China will increase investment to accelerate the consolidation and improvement of rural drinking water and try to achieve a centralized rural water supply rate of 86% and a tap water penetration rate of 82% by the end of 2019. By 2020, the water safety issue is expected to be solved in fluorine-rich rural areas.
 
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Targeted assistance helps improve medical condition in China's poorest regions
Source: Xinhua| 2019-02-17 09:26:15|Editor: Chengcheng

BEIJING, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) -- Medical conditions in China's poorest regions are improving with the help of targeted medical assistance to hospitals in these regions.

More than 400 hospitals in such regions have been upgraded to higher levels, and over 30 hospitals of this kind can now provide medical services comparable to that of top hospitals, according to the National Health Commission (NHC) in a press release.

Once, the people and medical workers in these places were deeply troubled by the shortage of medicine, personnel and equipment.

Now, medical workers in hospitals such as Kashgar Prefecture Second People's Hospital in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region are witnessing the improvement of their hospital's condition.

"The hospital is now top-notch, with cutting-edge emergency treatment methods for heart diseases, " said a senior physician of the hospital, which received targeted assistance from top hospitals in Shanghai Municipality.

Since 2016, 963 top hospitals have paired with 1,180 hospitals in 834 impoverished counties to offer similar targeted assistance, the NHC figures show.

Benefitting from the assistance, today, 90 percent of patients suffering from severe or acute diseases in Xinjiang can be successfully treated.

Targeted assistance from top hospitals has also brought advanced hospital management methods to impoverished regions. With their help, many hospitals in such regions are setting up departments to treat more kinds of illnesses and cultivating young medical talents.

To further promote poverty alleviation work in the medical sector, the targeted medical assistance must be carried out more accurately, said Ma Weihang, an official with the Zhejiang Province's Health Commission.

"In some places, compared to advanced medical technology, the people need more practical therapies that can address their problems, " said Ma, adding that medical assistance should cope with the target region's medical situation.

"The NHC will step up efforts in rolling out more accurate and detailed medical assistance plans, and further improve the medical condition in impoverished areas by utilizing telemedicine technology, " said Jiao Yahui, deputy director of the Medical Administration Bureau under the NHC.
 
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Targeted assistance helps improve medical condition in China's poorest regions
Source: Xinhua| 2019-02-17 09:26:15|Editor: Chengcheng

BEIJING, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) -- Medical conditions in China's poorest regions are improving with the help of targeted medical assistance to hospitals in these regions.

More than 400 hospitals in such regions have been upgraded to higher levels, and over 30 hospitals of this kind can now provide medical services comparable to that of top hospitals, according to the National Health Commission (NHC) in a press release.

Once, the people and medical workers in these places were deeply troubled by the shortage of medicine, personnel and equipment.

Now, medical workers in hospitals such as Kashgar Prefecture Second People's Hospital in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region are witnessing the improvement of their hospital's condition.

"The hospital is now top-notch, with cutting-edge emergency treatment methods for heart diseases, " said a senior physician of the hospital, which received targeted assistance from top hospitals in Shanghai Municipality.

Since 2016, 963 top hospitals have paired with 1,180 hospitals in 834 impoverished counties to offer similar targeted assistance, the NHC figures show.

Benefitting from the assistance, today, 90 percent of patients suffering from severe or acute diseases in Xinjiang can be successfully treated.

Targeted assistance from top hospitals has also brought advanced hospital management methods to impoverished regions. With their help, many hospitals in such regions are setting up departments to treat more kinds of illnesses and cultivating young medical talents.

To further promote poverty alleviation work in the medical sector, the targeted medical assistance must be carried out more accurately, said Ma Weihang, an official with the Zhejiang Province's Health Commission.

"In some places, compared to advanced medical technology, the people need more practical therapies that can address their problems, " said Ma, adding that medical assistance should cope with the target region's medical situation.

"The NHC will step up efforts in rolling out more accurate and detailed medical assistance plans, and further improve the medical condition in impoverished areas by utilizing telemedicine technology, " said Jiao Yahui, deputy director of the Medical Administration Bureau under the NHC.


The way I see it, China is not doing just eradicating poverty or caring for vulnerable in the society, they are actually developing an "Alternative Moral" all together. That's why the whole West is freaking out.
 
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The way I see it, China is not doing just eradicating poverty or caring for vulnerable in the society, they are actually developing an "Alternative Moral" all together. That's why the whole West is freaking out.

Indeed, China's way is to ensure that centuries old dependence of developing world on the Western model and economic assistance, and build independent, competitive, and success oriented societies.

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17,800 Xinjiang students in inland area receive financial support

(Xinhua) 16:49, February 18, 2019

URUMQI, Feb. 18 (Xinhua) -- Northwest China's Xinjiang Province offered financial aid for 17,800 impoverished Xinjiang students studying in inland areas in 2018, the regional education bureau said.

Xinjiang started the project in 2016 of offering 6,000 yuan (885 U.S. dollars) per year to Xinjiang students who study in colleges in inland areas and face financial difficulties. The funds for this project come from financial aid from 19 provinces or major cities, including the prosperous cities of Beijing, Shanghai, and Shenzhen.

The 17,800 students are mostly from Aksu, Kashgar, Hotan and Kizilsu prefectures, the most poverty-stricken regions in southern Xinjiang, according to the bureau.

The central government decided at the first central work meeting on Xinjiang in 2010 to set up a mechanism under which 19 provinces and major cities provide financial and technological support to Xinjiang.

http://en.people.cn/n3/2019/0218/c90000-9547336.html
 
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China targets poverty relief to those most in need
Source: Xinhua| 2019-02-24 12:23:11|Editor: Yang Yi

BEIJING, Feb. 24 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese government took concrete measures in 2018 to ensure social welfare for the most disadvantaged people living under the poverty line, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs. The ministry has earmarked 2.25 billion yuan (about 335 million U.S. dollars) of its welfare lottery fund for 22 most poverty-stricken provincial areas, accounting for 80 percent of the total earmarked amount in 2018, said a statement from the ministry.

The ministry has improved welfare of the severely ill or disabled by granting them an individual living allowance on top of their family plans.

So far, minimum living allowances across the country have reached or surpassed the national poverty alleviation standard.

Other measures include sending professional social workers to poverty-stricken areas, enhancing protection of unsupervised "left-behind" children and disabled senior citizens and improving community governance.

China aims to lift all rural residents living below the current poverty line out of poverty by the year 2020.

In the new year, the ministry vowed to continue poverty alleviation among those most in need and punish those with violations including dereliction of duties, corruption and undesirable work styles.
 
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Education, nutrition improve language skills for children in rural China
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New study finds that providing nutritional support and psychosocial stimulation to at-risk children in China had a substantive impact on their development.
Copyright shutterstock.com

By Sarah Fister Gale
Mar 12, 2019

Prof. James Heckman’s innovative study in poor communities shows promising results


A groundbreaking study by University of Chicago scholars could have a profound impact on the lives and futures of children in poverty-stricken communities of rural China.

Prof. James Heckman, a pioneering economist and Nobel laureate, led an innovative early childhood trial that evaluated the long-term impact of providing nutritional support and psychosocial stimulation to at-risk children in China—tens of millions of whom are left alone in their rural communities when their parents travel to urban areas for work.

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Prof. James Heckman​

As part of the Rural Education and Child Health project (ChinaREACH), Heckman and fellow UChicago scholars worked with the China Development Research Foundation to collect data on child health, development and home environment. They found children who received both nutritional and educational interventions showed significant advances in language skills, as well as social and emotional development.

“We found a very substantive impact on their language development, even among fairly young children,” said Heckman, the Henry Schultz Distinguished Service Professor in Economics and the College, whose groundbreaking work on the benefits of early childhood education has helped shaped the field.

In an early analysis of the results, the language skills for treated children shows improvement over those of untreated children, according to Jin Zhou, a UChicago postdoctoral fellow who worked with Heckman on the program. “Treated children have significantly better performance than untreated children, which is an outcome that is not easy to achieve.”

“These are aspects that we know are important to a child’s long-term trajectory,” said Heckman, who directs the Center for the Economics of Human Development at UChicago. “Early spoken language is a precursor and predictor of later life development.”

Zhou adds that a growing body of literature shows social-emotional skills and communication skills are in high demand in the labor market, and that the value of building these skills in childhood increases over time. “With higher language and social-emotional skills, the children could have better future labor market outcomes,” she said.

Conducted from 2014-2017, the study combined China’s existing Children Nutrition Improvement Project in Poverty-stricken Areas (CNNIP), which provides free nutritional supplements to children in poverty, with an added home visit by a trained educator who taught caregivers about early child development and the benefits of adult-child interaction.

During the weekly visits, educators encouraged parents to be more nurturing and caring to the children, and to teach them through games, songs and other activities, according to Zhou. “They also watched the parents interacting with the children, and showed them what they should and shouldn’t do,” she said.

Program leaders believe that teaching parents why it is important to interact with and talk to children will directly impact their early childhood development, Zhou explained. “This is very important for cognitive and social-emotional development.”

“Early spoken language is a precursor and predictor of later life development.”
—Prof. James Heckman​

The format of Rural Education and Child Health project was based on an intervention in the 1980s called the Jamaica Parenting and Psychosocial Stimulation Curriculum, in which 127 stunted children (those who have not developed properly) aged 9-24 months received either a psychosocial stimulation intervention, which included physical, sensory, and/or emotional games and activities; a nutrition intervention; both, or neither.

In follow-up studies 20 years later, the stunted children who received psychosocial stimulation earned, on average, 25 percent more income than stunted children who did not receive stimulation. They also achieved the same average level of earnings as a non-stunted comparison group, indicating that the stimulation intervention enabled the stunted children to fully catch up with their non-stunted peers.

The Jamaica program’s proven success, coupled with the simplicity and scalability of the educational intervention, made it an ideal choice for China’s rural poverty challenge, Heckman said. Rather than seeking sophisticated, high-tech interventions that are often too costly and complicated to deploy in remote communities, this program relies on a simple, easily replicated model with proven long-term impact. “That was crucial to the success of the Jamaica project,” said Heckman.

Early results suggest it has been equally impactful for families in China.

ChinaREACH was deployed in 2014 to 1,500 families with children aged 6 to 36 months who were randomly selected throughout Huachi County in Gansu Province. From 2015-2017, the ChinaREACH team, under Heckman’s leadership, collected three rounds of data using early childhood instruments to assess children’s health, overall development, adult-child relationships, social, emotional and cognitive support in the home environment. The results demonstrate that while improving nutrition delivered positive benefits for physical and brain development, the psychosocial interventions had an even bigger impact, Heckman said.

In every category measured, performance among children in the treatment groups was better. “Even after just nine months, we saw huge improvements,” Zhou said. The children who received both nutritional and educational interventions showed significant advances in language skills, as well as social and emotional development.

“Even after just nine months, we saw huge improvements.”
—Postdoctoral fellow Jin Zhou​

He notes that President Xi Jinping is committed to addressing the challenge of rural poverty in China and the needs of the more than 60 million children left behind when their parents travel to urban settings for work. Heckman is hopeful that the early results of the ChinaREACH study will inform China’s national and provincial policy related to these issues, and potentially lead to a full scale-up of combined parenting and nutrition programs throughout rural China.

Heckman’s team plans to continue to assess the children in the coming years to prove the long-term impact of such educational interventions. They also hope to study the enduring effect of these interventions on subsequent children, extended families and the broader community as participating parents share the lessons they’ve learned.

He believes such interventions could change the trajectory of children’s lives across the country, helping them to be more productive and successful, and creating a foundation of successful parenting practices that will shape future generations.

—Story first appeared in Dialogo magazine.


Education, nutrition improve language skills for children in rural China | UChicago News
 
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10:34, 22-Apr-2019
How farmers' co-ops reduce poverty in NW China's pastoral areas
Chen Kairan

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For a long time, animal husbandry has been the primary source of income for the villagers in Ganglong township of northwest China's Qinghai Province. However, due to overgrazing, natural disasters and human-made destruction, grassland degradation, desertification, pest and rodent infestation are growing issues which severely restrict the sustainable development of animal husbandry. In this context, the "Ganglong Ecological Animal Husbandry Cooperatives" emerged.

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Animal husbandry is still the primary source of income for many villagers in Ganglong township, Gande County, Guoluo Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, northwest China's Qinghai Province. /CGTN Photo

The start of a farmer's co-op

In August 2009, Ganglong township held a municipal assembly during which the villagers decided to use 150,000 yuan (22,400 U.S. dollars) of poverty alleviation funding by the provincial government as starting capital to form a farmers' cooperative.

Agricultural cooperatives adopt a shareholding system. Herder families exchange their livestock or grassland for equal shares to become shareholders. Herders, milking workers and other professionals in the industrial chain may voluntarily choose their position or be elected by the cooperative.

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In August 2009, Ganglong township, Gande County, Guoluo Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, northwest China's Qinghai Province, decided during a municipal assembly to form a farmers' co-op. /CGTN Photo

The co-ops sell yogurt and other livestock-related products. The herders and other farm workers receive a monthly salary so that they can cover the cost of their expenses, such as grazing. All those who joined a co-op are paid a stock dividend at the end of the year.

At first, only 22 herders joined the first co-op. In 2015, Ganglong township was selected as the pilot cooperative of Guoluo Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture to promote the grassland ecological animal husbandry zone. As a result, all 178 households of herders have joined one of the two cooperatives, a total of 769 people and 394 laborers. All the herders' livestock and grasslands have been converted into shares; 4,095 livestock are integrated.

Annual income increased by 900 percent

The first change brought by the establishment of the agricultural cooperatives was that the herders' revenue significantly increased. In 2009, a local herder family's yearly income was around 1,000 yuan (149 U.S. dollars). In 2019, the average herder family's yearly income has risen to about 10,000 yuan (1,492 U.S. dollars) – almost a 900 percent increase.

A second change brought by the new shareholding system is that it liberates the labor force, letting more people contribute to the development of other industries, such as Tibetan clothing production.

Thirdly, the protection of the ecological environment has considerably improved. Grasslands were able to rehabilitate as the cooperative has adopted rotational grazing. In moving livestock between pastures, not only can forage production be increased, but the grass is allowed to recover, which promotes the sustainable development of ecological animal husbandry.

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Farmers' co-ops of Ganglong township, Gande County, Guoluo Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, northwest China's Qinghai Province, have adopted rotational grazing, which promotes the sustainable development of ecological animal husbandry. /CGTN Photo

Rats still a problem

Although the cooperative system has seen great success during the past ten years, challenges still exist. According to Zanzhong, the chairman of one of the cooperatives in Ganglong township, the lack of professional financial personnel due to low education levels in the area has become a significant problem limiting the development of the cooperatives.

Also, the farmer's lack of sales experience and partnering organizations limits the expansion of the industry to other downstream sales markets.

Besides, the overgrazing in the 1990s, which destroyed the ecological balance of the area and resulted in the mass reproduction and ravages of rats and wolves, still impacts production today.

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Ganglong township, Gande County, Guoluo Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture, northwest China's Qinghai Province, still suffer from a rat overpopulation due to overgrazing of the local pastures in the 1990s. /CGTN Photo

Expanding the product line

Being asked about the future and plan for the cooperatives, the head of Ganglong township, Xin Yougong, said although the cooperative model is well-developed, the lack of a leading enterprise to help the co-ops expand their markets is still a big problem.

"Currently, our yogurt could only be sold to Guoluo City, never going beyond to other cities and regions. So right now we're looking for a company to cooperate with us in a bid to expand to a bigger market," he said.

Xin added the cooperatives would extend their product line to include milk powder and milk wine shortly. Furthermore, they plan to transport male yak to another county of Guoluo Autonomous Tibetan Prefecture, to help the development of ecological animal husbandry in other villages.
 
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Pinduoduo to build 1,000 agri plantations in west China in anti-poverty campaign

(Xinhua) 13:33, April 24, 2019


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(Photo/cnr.cn)


SHANGHAI, April 24 (Xinhua) -- Chinese social e-commerce giant Pinduoduo plans to build 1,000 agricultural plantations in five years to help farmers make gains in the latest anti-poverty efforts.

The agricultural plantations will mainly be located in southwestern and northwestern China where produce from impoverished regions can be directly sold online to more than 400 million users, according to a statement from the company.

In addition, the new campaign aims to help build a sustainable platform to protect farmers' interests by offering incentives and entrepreneurship training while introducing third-party services and local government supervision.

The first agricultural plantation is piloted in Baoshan City in Yunnan Province to help upgrade the local coffee industry by planting more high-quality breeds and developing more sophisticated products. The program will be extended to other five sectors including tea and walnuts in Yunnan.

The company has become one of China's largest online retail platforms with sales of produce reaching 65.3 billion yuan (9.73 billion U.S. dollars) in 2018. Official data showed that China's online produce sales totaled about 300 billion yuan last year.

Agriculture is one major industry with huge opportunities, and Pinduoduo will continue to offer technological and capital investment to make farming an attractive profession, said Pinduoduo co-founder Da Da.

Founded in 2015, the Shanghai-based firm is known for offering group buying deals with big discounts, and enjoys a huge consumer base in rural areas and small cities. Pinduoduo's revenues totaled 13.12 billion yuan last year, surging 652 percent from the previous year.

http://en.people.cn/n3/2019/0424/c90000-9571498.html
 
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China's serious disease insurance reimbursement rate to reach 60 pct
Source: Xinhua| 2019-05-12 18:59:30|Editor: Liangyu

BEIJING, May 12 (Xinhua) -- China will raise the reimbursement rate of the country's serious disease insurance scheme to 60 percent this year, up 10 percentage points, authorities said.

The National Healthcare Security Administration and the Ministry of Finance have jointly issued a circular stating that government subsidies for basic medical insurance for rural and non-working urban residents will be increased by 30 yuan to reach no less than 520 yuan (about 76.6 U.S. dollars) per capita annually.

Half of the increased subsidies will be used for serious illness insurance, said the circular, adding that poverty-stricken populations will be prioritized.

Premium paid by the insured will also be increased by 30 yuan.

The circular called for efforts to raise the reimbursement rate for inpatient expenses and to include outpatient medicines for high blood pressure and diabetes into the medical insurance reimbursement list.

It also required improved policies and standardized management regarding serious disease insurance.

As of the end of 2018, the country's serious disease insurance program was covering about 1.05 billion people.
 
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Remote ethnic group rises above poverty in Yunnan, China
New China TV
Published on May 28, 2019

"It's a life that we dared not dream of in the past." China's Dulong ethnic group, living in mountains once cut off by snow for half a year, has now risen above poverty.
 
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China will raise the reimbursement rate of the country's serious disease insurance scheme to 60 percent this year, up 10 percentage points, authorities said.

A good practice of social state.

As the nation gets richer, social welfare will get universal, covering many areas not seen in neoliberal/capitalist countries.
 
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