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China poverty alleviation, raising standard of living

China's rural per capita disposable income reaches 22,866 yuan in 2016
2017-02-12 10:01 | Xinhua | Editor: Huang Mingrui

Some pictures of related to rural areas of Zhejiang Province.

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People select agricultural products in Yiwu, east China's Zhejiang Province, Jan. 3, 2017. Rural per capita disposable income reached 22,866 yuan in 2016, according to Survey Office of the National Bureau of Statistics in Zhejiang. (Xinhua/Tan Jin)

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Biology breeding expert Wu Shuiqin (L) and his colleagues check vegetable seedlings at a company in east China's Zhejiang Province, Oct. 23, 2016. Rural per capita disposable income reached 22,866 yuan in 2016, according to Survey Office of the National Bureau of Statistics in Zhejiang. (Xinhua/Tan Jin)

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Villagers perform dragon dance in Dali Village of Anji, east China's Zhejiang Province, June 4, 2016. Rural per capita disposable income reached 22,866 yuan in 2016, according to Survey Office of the National Bureau of Statistics in Zhejiang. (Xinhua/Tan Jin)

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Farming expert Yu Yonghui (L) and farmer Yu Xuelin check the growth of chilli plants in Jiaxing, east China's Zhejiang Province, Oct. 23, 2016. Rural per capita disposable income reached 22,866 yuan in 2016, according to Survey Office of the National Bureau of Statistics in Zhejiang. (Xinhua/Tan Jin)

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Photo taken on June 3, 2016 shows a scene of Shuangyi Village in Anji County, east China's Zhejiang Province. Rural per capita disposable income reached 22,866 yuan in 2016, according to Survey Office of the National Bureau of Statistics in Zhejiang. (Xinhua/Tan Jin)
 
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Agriculture professor spreads techniques and hope to poor farmers in China and Africa
By Huang Jingjing Source:Global Times Published: 2017/2/9 23:44:41

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Li Xiaoyun (right) imparts planting techniques in Tanzania in July 2015. Photo: Kong Deji

For the past two decades, Li Xiaoyun, a professor at the China Agricultural University (CAU), has devoted himself to eliminating poverty in China's rural areas. As he turns 55 years old, he shows no sign of stopping and has even expanded his reach to Africa.

A doctorate in crop ecology in CAU, Li began to tour the country's poor areas, taking part in efforts to reduce poverty in the mid-1990s. "I'm doing development studies. Poverty relief is a major part of it. Only by going into villages and getting involved can we find solutions," Li told the Global Times in a recent interview.

In 1994, Li and his colleagues, for the first time, drew up a participatory poverty reduction model, which was later adopted by the central government and promoted across the country.

In recent years, he has become more personally involved in this cause. He established a poverty alleviation center in Southwest China's Yunnan Province.

He also took his students to Tanzania to teach the local farmers planting techniques. In the past three years, the corn output in demonstration fields there has increased five folds.

His dedication to poverty relief and charity spirit have earned him lots of awards and titles, as well as many chances to speak at international meetings.

Li believes that mutual aid is fundamental to maintaining basic social order. He likes to quote a verse from the renowned Tang Dynasty (618-907) poet and government official Bai Juyi: "If everybody is warm like me, nobody in the world is cold," saying this is also his wish.

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New houses are built in Hebian village in Yunnan with the help of Li Xiaoyun's poverty alleviation center. Photo: Courtesy of Mengla Xiaoyun Poverty Alleviation Center


First attempts

In 1994, he applied for a 250,000 yuan ($36,000) grant from a German foundation to set up his first anti-poverty project in a town in Yanqing county, Beijing.

Afraid that the funds would be embezzled, he withdrew the cash from the bank and took it to the town himself. At a meeting attended by the county head, town head and villagers, he handed the money to the farmers. Under his guidance, the farmers used the money to build a foundation.

Following international practice, Li asked that the funds be prioritized for the poorest families in order to buy breeding sheep. When the sheep gave birth, the lambs were to be given to other poor families.

However, a series of setbacks have led to the failure of his first project. "During that period, I was beset by problems such as who would be the first candidates to receive the funds, who would receive the lambs and what to do when the sheep die," Li recalled. Some farmers even went to Li's home to make complaints and give tip-offs.

"The sudden arrival of the funds broke the peace in the villages. It also changed their government structure and I, an outsider, became one of the power brokers," he noted.

The lessons learned from this first attempt meant that his project in Yanchi county in Ningxia had somewhat better results. Instead of becoming personally involved, he allowed some literate locals to monitor the funds after giving them specific training.

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Efforts in Africa

Li has also expanded his research and experiment in poverty alleviation to African countries.

In 2011, the International Poverty Reduction Center in China launched an aid project in Tanzania.

Li and his team played a major role. Besides leading his team in introducing Chinese agricultural development experience to the country's officials and farmers, Li also helped them nurture agriculture experts and invited them to China to receive short-term training.

They also divided into groups to take charge of different villages and households, teaching farmers about the planting density, weeding and anti-drought techniques.

After five years, the China-Tanzania Agricultural Technology Demonstration Centre has set up a chicken farm, a paddy rice field and a vegetable garden, and has become a popular agriculture learning base for local students and farmers.

Several senior Tanzanian officials, including the former premier and president, have acknowledged Li's contribution.

"Chinese development can't be realized if we only rely on input. Exercising the international humanitarian spirit will directly affect Chinese efforts to build ties with the world," Li wrote earlier.

The agricultural technology assistance has been a major part of Chinese aids to Africa. In some African countries, the shortage of food and clothing has been curbed, but poverty still remains a huge problem.

Li believes it is important for China to contribute to poverty reduction on the continent.

"The aids to Africa can show China's exercise of duty and responsibility, create a positive image of China's influence, and relieve the possible obstacles and constriction against us," Li said.

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Li speaks with villagers and volunteers in Hebian.
Photo: Courtesy of Mengla Xiaoyun Poverty Alleviation Center


Hebian experiment

His efforts in China continue. In 2015, he targeted Hebian, a poor Yao ethnic village in Mengla county in Yunnan's Xishuangbanna Dai Autonomous Prefecture.

After a half-year survey, Li led his team to Hebian, and officially started the process to relieve the village from extreme poverty by turning it into a forest holiday resort.

"We were quite skeptical at the beginning. We thought that there wouldn't be such a good thing, and even suspected them of being frauds pretending that they wanted to help us get rich," Deng Linguo, an accountant from the village committee, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

After cement roads, sanitation facilities and new houses were built, these doubts disappeared completely.

"We have never been so enthusiastic about getting rid of the poverty that has been passed down through several generations," Deng noted.

In fact, the villagers have already tasted the benefits of the change that Li has brought to them. Last year, through his online shop, Li sold thousands of eggs at a price of 10 yuan each. Eggs laid by free range chickens in rainforests have proven popular among urban consumers.

Since the reform and opening-up drive, China has lifted more than 700 million of its citizens out of poverty. But there are still tens of millions of people living below the poverty line.

He believes this task will be an uphill struggle. But he is convinced that the experiment in Hebian will succeed and can be followed or copied.

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Li offers his guidance at a construction site in Heibian.
Photo: Courtesy of Mengla Xiaoyun Poverty Alleviation Center

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Li explains the house reconstruction plan to the Hebian villagers.
Photo: Courtesy of Mengla Xiaoyun Poverty Alleviation Center
 
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Tourism provides chance for prosperity around cliff village
2017-02-14 14:59 | chinadaily.com.cn | Editor: Feng Shuang

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Children climb up a cliff on a vine ladder to an isolated village on the top of a mountain in Liangshan Yi
autonomous prefecture, Southwest China's Sichuan province, on May 14, 2016. (Photo/Beijing News)

The mountaintop village in Southwest China where children used to climb rattan ladders up and down the 800-meter cliff will be at the center of a tourism and poverty relief project, a village official said.

"We will build the village with traditional Yi people's customs. Visitors can reach the village by the path along the cliff and cableway to experience its uniqueness," the village official Mose Zigu said about the future plan.

Atule'er village in Zhaojue county of Liangshan Yi autonomous prefecture in Southwest China's Sichuan province became more well-known after photos of children climbing rattan ladders to get home shocked many in May.

The village, home to 72 families, is known as "cliff village" because its vertical distance to the ground is 800 meters. Previously, the only routes leading to the outside world were the 17 vine ladders.

A steel ladder with handrails was completed in November costing one million yuan ($148,000), with the prefecture government and Zhaojue county sharing the cost equally.

A tourism company from Chengdu, capital city of Sichuan, has signed contracts to develop the tourism project around the cliff village in two phases, with an initial investment of 300 million yuan, Mose Zigu told the West China Metropolis Daily, a local newspaper.

The tourism bureau of Zhaojue county confirmed that the first phase of the project has been launched, which involves establishing a visitor center, a cableway to the cliff village, a path and bridge along the cliff, a path along Guli canyon and other facilities.

The tourism infrastructure of the village will be an important part of the Daliangshan mountainous area's development plan that will lift the village and other nearby villages out of poverty, according to a prefecture's outline.

Mose Zigu said that the village has benefited after the steel ladder was finished. Six outside women married into the village and local villagers are also attempting new things to make money, including raising sheep and making liquor.

"We have been continuously considering ways to help villagers make money," Mose Zigu said, and the tourism development will be at the core of reaching the poverty relief target.

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New houses in E China's village become popular on internet
(Xinhua) 09:24, February 18, 2017


Photo taken on Feb. 17, 2017 shows the courtyard of a newly-built house in Dongziguan Village in Fuyang District of Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province. The 46 new houses of the resettlement site in the village become popular on the internet recently for the appearance like Chinese ink paintings. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)


Photo taken on Feb. 17, 2017 shows newly-built houses in Dongziguan Village in Fuyang District of Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province. The 46 new houses of the resettlement site in the village become popular on the internet recently for the appearance like Chinese ink paintings. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)


Photo taken on Feb. 17, 2017 shows the new houses in Dongziguan Village in Fuyang District of Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province. The 46 new houses of the resettlement site in the village become popular recently for their beautiful appearance like Chinese ink paintings. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)


Photo taken on Feb. 17, 2017 shows a new house in Dongziguan Village in Fuyang District of Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province. The 46 new houses of the resettlement site in the village become popular recently for their beautiful appearance like Chinese ink paintings. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)


Villagers hang lanterns in their new house in Dongziguan Village in Fuyang District of Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province, Feb. 17, 2017. The 46 new houses of the resettlement site in the village become popular on the internet recently for the appearance like Chinese ink paintings. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)

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Photo taken on Feb. 17, 2017 shows newly-built houses in Dongziguan Village in Fuyang District of Hangzhou, capital of east China's Zhejiang Province. The 46 new houses of the resettlement site in the village become popular on the internet recently for the appearance like Chinese ink paintings. (Xinhua/Xu Yu)
 
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Going downhill, but raising living standards
By Sun Xiaochen | China Daily | Updated: 2017-02-20


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Children learn to ski at the Meihuashan International Ski Resort in Liupanshui, Guizhou province. [Photo/Xinhua]


Once regarded as a winter sports wilderness, Liupanshui, a city in Guizhou province, has overturned expectations and is building an industry based around high-altitude ski resorts to promote winter tourism and lift people out of poverty.

Promoted as part of Beijing's preparations for the 2022 Winter Olympic Games, skiing has enjoyed a surge in popularity in North China, a fact highlighted by the bustling scenes at suburban resorts during the recent Spring Festival holiday.

However, few people would have expected a similar scenario in the country's much warmer, but underdeveloped, southwestern regions, until a recent skiing event shed light on the fledgling businesses of three new resorts built on the rugged terrain that surrounds Liupanshui.

The five-day National Youth Alpine Skiing Invitational Tournament, held from Jan 15 to 19 at the Yushe Snow Mountain Resort and the Meihuashan International Ski Resort on the outskirts of the city, attracted more than 5,000 visitors, half of them from nearby provinces. Many of the visitors were experiencing the chills and thrills for the first time.

Meanwhile, another resort, Wumeng Yunhai in Pan county, 140 kilometers south of the city, has just entered its second year of commercial operations and can host 2,000 visitors a day.

The three resorts, which operate nine skiing trails combined at an average altitude of 2,200 meters, can accommodate 20,000 visitors simultaneously.

"I'd heard about skiing and watched it on TV, and knew how popular it is, especially among people in Northeast China, but I never had a chance to try it until today," said Wei Lijun, a local resident who was offered a free pass to the Meihuashan Resort on the opening day of the tournament.

"It's so much fun, even though I have fallen down many times. It's a totally new experience for a lot of us here," said Wei, who was accompanied by her husband and son.

Situated halfway up the Plum Blossom Mountain, just 10 km northwest of the city, the resort features verdant views along its artificial snow trails, while the temperature at altitude remains cold enough to maintain enough groomed ski runs for the resort to operate for two months during winter.

Racing in the relatively warm environment was a surprisingly pleasant experience for the athletes who participated in the tournament, most of whom train in China's northeastern provinces, where snow is abundant.

"I had no idea that a ski resort could be built in the southern part of the country. It feels so different from the teeth-chattering training sessions at snow-capped resorts in the north; the trees are still green here and we don't need to dress like polar bears during our warm-ups," said Zhang Yuying, after winning the women's slalom at Meihuashan.

Wang Rongtao from Harbin, the capital of Heilongjiang, a winter sports power province, said the ski runs are as smooth as those in more established resorts in the north: "They are shorter here, but the quality of the snow is perfect for racing. Plus the snow here doesn't freeze into ice in the morning like it does in Harbin."

Positive feedback from elite athletes has repaid the efforts made by local governments, businesspeople and village cadres to transform the former industrial hub into an emerging winter sports and leisure destination that will help raise local living standards.

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Mu Chengze participates in the men's slalom at the National Youth Alpine Skiing Invitational Tournament in Liupanshui. [Photo/Xinhua]


Hard times

Liupanshui was established in the 1970s, after the government called for greater urbanization of the rural southwestern region, which is home to a number of ethnic groups. The city gradually developed a resource-dependent economy based on mining and the extraction of raw materials, but the area has struggled in the past decade as a result of economic restructuring geared toward eco-friendly and high-tech industries.

Hampered by the slowdown and the poor transportation infrastructure in the mountains, nearly 390,000 rural residents of the city's total population of 3.28 million live below the poverty line.

In 2015, the poverty line for rural residents was 2,800 yuan ($408) per person, according to the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation and Development, which adjusts the standard every year.

Boasting a mild climate, scenic landscape and abundant forests, which cover almost half of its territory, Liupanshui is ambitiously promoting its tourism resources, anticipating an economic turnaround, while the national strategy to boost the winter sports sector for the 2022 Olympic Games has given the city's efforts a timely push.

"The whole country has been mobilized (for the development of the winter sports industry). Given the excellent natural conditions we have, we don't want to be left behind," said Zhou Rong, Liupanshui's mayor, at the opening ceremony of the tournament at Meihuashan.

In November, the General Administration of Sports, the nation's leading sports body, published a national plan to built 650 skating rinks and 800 ski resorts by 2022, up from the current 200 and 500 respectively. That will lay the foundations to involve 300 million people in winter sports and related activities, as envisioned by President Xi Jinping in July 2015, when Beijing and co-host Zhangjiakou were awarded the rights to host the 2022 Winter Games.

Living standards rise

A number of underprivileged families around the city's new resorts have already benefited from the winter sports boom.

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Children learn to ski at the Meihuashan International Ski Resort in Liupanshui, Guizhou province. [Photo/Xinhua]


All 206 households in Gaolu village, which is located on the part of the mountain that is home to the Meihuashan resort, have become shareholders in the company that operates the resort by granting it right to use their land. Their contribution accounted for 20 million yuan of the 350 million yuan that has so far been invested in the resort and related facilities.

Between this year and 2021, the villagers expect to receive a combined annual dividend of 400,000 yuan from the resort's revenue, and 20 percent of the amount will be directly allocated to support the 75 households now living below the poverty line, according to Zhang Liangkai, the village chief.

"Even though the resort isn't yet running at full capacity, our people have already made a better living by participating in its construction and related facilities," he said.

About 20 impoverished villagers from Gaolu are employed by the resort's security, catering and equipment-maintenance teams, while a major construction project provided jobs for 120 villagers in 2015.

By the end of last year, the annual per capita income in the village had risen to nearly 8,000 yuan, from 4,860 yuan in 2014.

"In the past, we ate potatoes three meals a day because no other commercial crops could be cultivated on the rugged landscape. Now, we can afford to buy cars, and many people from outside the mountain have visited our village, which has made a huge difference," said Chen Jun, a 36-year-old Gaolu native who works in the resort's six-man patrol team.

However, the lack of professional winter sports skills and operational expertise has emerged as an issue for locals who want to run the business sustainably on their own, according to insiders.

"The market potential for winter sports and recreation is something to be reckoned with in this part of the region. Staff training, especially for locals, should be improved because the demand for high-end talent in advanced ski instruction, slope grooming and event operation, rather than just waiters and cleaning ladies, may grow very quickly," said Zhu Chengyi, vice-chairman of the Chinese Ski Association.

According to Liu Guanwen, deputy general manager of the Meihuashan resort, most of the 300 technical and operational staff come from Northeast China, while all 150 ski instructors at the Yushe Snow Mountain Resort, Meihuashan's co-host for the alpine skiing event, were hired from Heilongjiang province, which is also in the northeast.

"We are planning a training program in collaboration with mature resorts and local occupational schools to consistently nurse talent for the resorts in Liupanshui," Liu said.
 
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War against poverty in NW China farmlands
Xinhua | Updated: 2017-02-16

XI'AN - Rather than on campus, Professor Li Bingzhi's office is on a stretch of farmland.

Li, 61, is a professor from Northwest Agriculture and Forest University in China's Shaanxi Province. In 2012, he went to isolated Qianyang County to popularize the latest apple cultivation technologies, among local fruit farmers.

Each year, he spends nearly 300 days in the orchards.

"I impart the latest cultivation technology to farmers, face to face. It is our duty to help farmers out of poverty," Li said.

Over 25,000 of Qianyang's 8,000-plus households in 2016 still lived under the poverty line, meaning they survived on an annual income of about 3,000 yuan (440 U.S. dollars) per capita.

In the past year, Li and his team organized more than 30 cultivation technology training activities, benefiting more than 8,000 local fruit farmers.

The area of apple orchards in Qianyang has tripled to 100,000 mu (6,700 hectares) since 2012, with apple output per mu rising from 500 kilograms to 2,000 kilograms, bringing the annual income of local farmers up to 50,000 yuan.

"The projects with less investment and quick earnings can really help farmers out of poverty," Li said. "This year, we are determined to help them reduce the costs of planting by half, by breeding high-quality fruit trees."

Thanks to the sound technology application environment, Qianyang has attracted several large agriculture enterprises to set up fruit manufacturing factories in recent years, creating more job opportunities.

The introduction of talent also brings local farmers new sales channels for fresh produce. E-commerce is booming in the poverty-hit region.

Han Xiao is a household name in Shanyang County. In 2015, he started his online shop on Taobao, a shopping platform of China's e-commerce giant Alibaba, receiving lots of orders for his latest local honey products.

More farmers followed Han's success. In Shanyang, online sales hit 1 billion yuan in 2016, creating more than 2,300 jobs and helping 560 families out of poverty.

"E-commerce in rural areas has become an increasingly important means of reforming agricultural development and helped reduce poverty," said Zhang Hong, professor with Xi'an University of Posts & Telecommunications.

Shaanxi expects to achieve its 2017 target of lifting 885,000 people out of poverty. In order to win the war against poverty, local governments have adopted means such as e-commerce, financing, industry, relocation and improvement of infrastructure.
 
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What President Xi has said on battle against poverty
chinadaily.com.cn | 2017-02-23

In a session of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China Central Committee on Tuesday, President Xi Jinping emphasized that eradicating poverty in rural areas on time is the "bottom line for China's building a well-off society in an all-round way".

In fact, Chinese people's livelihood, especially those who are impoverished, has always been the President's concern. Let's take a look at what he has said during the past years regarding efforts to eradicate poverty.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping visits the home of villager Xu Xuehai in Desheng village, Xiaoertai township of Zhangbei county in North China's Hebei province, on Jan 24, 2017. [Photo/Xinhua]

Jan 24, 2017

"Making sure children of impoverished families enjoy access to high-quality education is a fundamental solution to poverty."

Xi made the remarks during a tour of the city of Zhangjiakou in northern China's Hebei Province, where he inspected an impoverished village, visiting and chatting with poor families, discussing how they could shake off poverty.

He stressed the importance of precision in the battle against poverty, saying that poverty alleviation should focus on targeted people and industries, and use the right tools to produce results.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping talks with villagers at villager Ma Kejun's home in Yangling village of Dawan town in Guyuan city, Northwest China's Ningxia Hui autonomous region, July 18, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

July 18, 2016

"There are still some 50 million Chinese struggling with poverty, and by 2020 they must all be lifted out of poverty. This is my top concern now."

Xi Jinping made a three-day inspection tour in Northwest China's Ningxia Hui autonomous region. No region or ethnic group should be left behind in China's drive to build a moderately prosperous society by 2020, Xi said.

Xi has urged developed regions in the east help their partner regions in the west better fight poverty at a national conference on poverty alleviation through east-west cooperation in Yinchuan, capital city of Ningxia.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping in a rice paddy field in the Yanbian Korean autonomous prefecture, Jilin province, on July 16, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]

July 16, 2015

"We are striving for establishing an all-round moderately prosperous society. No one should drop out, nor any ethnic groups should drop out."

During his inspection tour to Jilin province, the president visited Yanbian, home to China's largest Korean ethnic minority population.

Xi visited a small village in Yanbian, talking to farmers along the paddy field and dropping by the village community center and farmers' houses. Stressing the importance of food safety to the country, Xi promised to offer more support to farming areas so that the local economy will improve and farmers can increase their income through developing agriculture.

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President Xi Jinping talks with villagers at Huamao village of Fengxiang township in Zunyi county, Southwest China's Guizhou province, June 16, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]

June 16, 2015

"A good life is created with one’s own hands, so poverty is nothing to fear. If we have determination and confidence, we can overcome any difficulty."

Xi made a stop in Huamao village of Zunyi county that has been lifted out of poverty in recent years. He visited greenhouses, financial centers, bamboo and pottery workshops to learn how poverty reduction projects are running.

Xi chatted with the villagers, saying the Communist Party of China (CPC) central committee cares a lot about farmers, particularly those in poverty, and has enacted various policies to boost rural development.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping visits people in Liangjiahe village, Wen'anyi township of Yanchuan county, Yan'an, Northwest China's Shaanxi province, Feb 13, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]

Feb 13, 2015

"A well-off society will be incomplete if people in the old guerrilla base areas cannot shake off poverty."

Xi said during a meeting with Party chiefs of 24 counties and cities from Shaanxi and Gansu provinces and the Ningxia Hui autonomous region. Xi made a tour in Shaanxi on Feb 13 - 16, 2015.

Xi said he wanted to end poverty in old revolutionary base areas and improve local people's standard of living.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping pays a visit to a family in Ganjiazhai village, Ludian county, Southwest China's Yunnan province on Jan 19, 2015. [Photo/Xinhua]

Jan 19, 2015

"[There is] only five to six years left for us to complete the building of a moderately prosperous society in all respects, time will not wait for us."

Speaking in an inspection in southwest China's Yunnan Province that lasted from Jan. 19 to 21, Xi said authorities must accelerate poverty elimination efforts to support the building of a moderately prosperous country.

Authorities must expedite poverty relief work -- with more action than words, he urged, adding that measures must be more effective.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping talks with family members of Shi Qiwen, a villager at Shibadong village in Paibi township of Huayuan county in the Tujia-Miao autonomous prefecture of Xiangxi, central China's Hunan province, Nov 3, 2013. [Photo/Xinhua]

Nov 3, 2013

"Poverty alleviation plans should be based on real situations. It should be targeted at specific groups in specific situations and should avoid using loud slogans."

Xi took an inspection tour to Hunan Province from Nov 3 to Nov 5, 2013. Xi said alleviating poverty in the region should be done with targeted policies, including improving agriculture and education.

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Chinese President Xi Jinping pays a visit to the family of Tang Rongbin, an impoverished villager in the Gujiatai village of Longquanguan township, Fuping county, North China's Hebei province, Dec 30, 2012. Xi made a tour to impoverished villages in Fuping County from Dec. 29 to 30, 2012. [Photo/Xinhua]

Dec 30, 2012

"I came here to see what your life look like. I want to see your true living condition."

Xi Jinping said that while meeting with Tang Rongbin, a resident in Luotuowan village.

Braving chilly weather around minus 10 degrees Celsius, Xi visited homes of farmers at Luotuowan and Gujiatai villages in Fuping county, North China's Hebei province, a couple

of days before the New Year. Nestled in steep mountains, Fuping is among China's most impoverished counties. It has an annual net per capita income of 2,400 yuan ($390).

"The most arduous task facing China in completing the building of a moderately prosperous society is in rural areas, especially poverty-stricken regions," Xi said.
 
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No, not really. The current course is good enough, when the Total Fertility Rate is around 2.3-2.4

Also, my advocacy for China is not to have a TFR of 10 or something. Rather, it is for them to have a TFR of around 2.2

2.1 is the replacement fertility rate, that is the rate required for the population to stay stable.




No, having a one child policy is not gonna help, and has never helped.

China's success was not due to one child policy. I=

It was due to a whole economic revolution, a result of good policies.

I agree with you.
I think One child policy was implemented strictly only in urban area.
From my observation, the rural families usually have at least 2 kids in China, especially in the South of China.
when I came to Shanghai, local Shanghainese were very surprise that many outsiders have siblings. while they nearly all come from single child family.

the merit of poverty-alleviation belongs to the fast development of economy.
 
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Wonderful thread, it is every human beings right to earn themselves a more prosperous life and raise themselves above the shackles of poverty.

This is much more pleasant reading than all the '....dominates this' threads on this site, or '.....overtaking this', or '.....has the best planes/missiles/ships/tanks/nukes etc' threads.
 
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China to build 6 million homes for shantytown-dwellers in 2017
People's Daily Online | Updated: 2017-02-24

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Aerial photo taken on Jan 9, 2017 shows view of Zhangqiao, one of the largest shantytowns, and surrounding estate in Hongkou district, East China's Shanghai. [Photo/Xinhua]

China will build 6 million new homes for residents of shantytowns before the end of 2017, said Chen Zhenggao, Minister of Housing and Urban-Rural Development, at a news briefing in Beijing on Feb 23.

The Chinese central government started a three-year project to rebuild urban shantytowns in 2015, aiming to construct a total of 18 million new homes in all. In 2015, construction began on 6.01 million new dwellings, and another 6.06 were started in 2016.

According to Chen, the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development (MHURD) kicked off this year's shantytown transformation work on Jan. 16. The central government has provided 224.3 billion RMB in subsidies for the work in 2017, an increase of 15 billion RMB compared with last year.

China is determined to reconstruct all of its existing shantytowns by 2020. MHURD is working with relevant departments to conduct a thorough investigation and make the planned transformation a reality.

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Wonderful thread, it is every human beings right to earn themselves a more prosperous life and raise themselves above the shackles of poverty.

This is much more pleasant reading than all the '....dominates this' threads on this site, or '.....overtaking this', or '.....has the best planes/missiles/ships/tanks/nukes etc' threads.

Indeed, except for foreign domination, subjugation and explicit/implicit colonialism, the worst case of a lack of human rights is poverty.

Poverty is disempowering, creating vicious cycles, and condemning successive generations (due to lack of life chances) to a similar state of existence.

Breaking of this cycle through a purely national effort without resorting to colonization or war plundering, and while maintaining economic and political sovereignty, is the most difficult task for any government.
 
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Commentary: How China will win its war on poverty
Source: Xinhua | 2017-02-25 21:44:31 | Editor: huaxia

BEIJING, Feb. 25 (Xinhua) -- It is one thing to make promises, but quite another to keep them.

The Chinese government decided to eradicate poverty by 2020 -- the target year for China to become a "moderately prosperous" society -- and the country is confident.

China's economic growth has been astonishing over the past three decades, but the economy must provide for 1.3 billion people. The gap between rich and poor remains as wide in China as it does in many other countries, and the Chinese government knows it.

But there have been more than 55 million success stories in the past four years. That's twice the population of Texas.

And this drive will not stop until the day dawns when the last person living in poverty finds his or her rightful place as a citizen of a well-off society.

PRECISION

China uses a combination of incentives and policy to tackle the problem, with "precision" the key.

Precision is the target: spending money exactly where it is needed, and no more than is needed. It is the very poorest of people who should feel the most benefit.

"You should not bomb fleas with grenades," means appropriate resources should be used in the right place at the right time.

Governments have compiled databases of how many people are living in poverty and why. Timetables have been set.

Projects have been arranged according to the specifics of every region or even every family. Better use of resources leads to more, better jobs. People must move to places where jobs are to be found, and where public services are fit for purpose.

Proper training will produce an army of workers with the skills that modern, sustainable industries need. Special care must be given to those children left behind as their parents seek ways of working to give them a better life. What the government gives in support should not be taken away again in taxation.

CADRES

Policy is just the first step. Implementation of those policies is the responsibility of cadres of the Communist Party of China (CPC).

Cadres at all levels must put the people at center of their work.They must seek out the very poorest and work with them. They must meet their poverty alleviation targets or find themselves in hot water.

The work in one place is evaluated by officials from other places to ensure impartiality. These assessments are an important yardstick in advancing careers.

Local officials must interact eagerly with people and businesses to work out solutions and mobilize all available resources including money, markets and NGOs.

Corruption, fraud or embezzlement of poverty-relief funds will be dealt with in the most severe ways.

It is a down-to-earth style and hard work that has led to a level of progress almost incredible to many other countries.

REFORM

Declaring a "war on poverty" is easy. The hard part is addressing the root causes of poverty.

China, the world's largest laboratory of economic, political and social experimentation, needs courage and wisdom.

Hundreds of reform measures have covered education, health care, finance and innovation. Most have proved helpful.

After Internet training, for instance, tens of thousands of simple farmers have begun to sell their products online and seen their incomes increase.

China's model may not work in other countries due to different systems and development stages, but it may inspire the world that, as long as a government makes real promises and takes real action, poverty can be conquered.
 
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Guizhou plans to relocate 750,000 impoverished people
Xinhua, February 26, 2017

Southwest China's Guizhou, one of the most impoverished provinces in the country, plans to relocate over 750,000 people this year as a poverty alleviation measure.

A total of 181,000 households will be moved from remote, inhospitable areas in the hope of providing them with a better life, said Wang Yingzheng, head of a provincial relocation bureau.

Over 3,600 entire villages will be moved, accounting for about 30 percent of those to be relocated, said Wang.

The cost of the operation is estimated at 45 billion yuan (6.6 billion U.S. dollars).

"We are moving two thirds more people than last year," he said.

China plans to lift 10 million people above poverty line this year, with Guizhou one of the frontline provinces.
 
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China's revolutionary heartland casts off poverty
Xinhua, February 26, 2017

Jinggangshan, the heartland of the early revolutionary activities of the Communist Party of China (CPC) announced Sunday that it has been officially taken off the list of impoverished areas.

Jinggangshan, east China's Jiangxi Province, was home to the CPC's first rural revolutionary base established in 1927. Today, people who live under the poverty line account for 1.6 percent of the total population, lower than the national standard of 2 percent, according to the city government.

The local government attributed the success to the precision poverty relief campaign in full swing across the country. Precision means that money should be spent exactly where it is needed, and no more than is needed.

Jinggangshan's poor population stood at 16,934 in 2014. That figure has fallen to 1,417 today. The average net income of poor families has grown from 2,600 yuan (378 U.S. dollars) to over 4,500 yuan.

Jinggangshan helped people to start their own businesses or find jobs, while providing a safety net for those who were unable. In addition, it helped poor people move into quality homes and improved rural infrastructure in rural areas.

The government has encouraged the poor people to be part of the city's most successful industries, such as tea, bamboo and fruit plantations and processing, as well as aquaculture.

Zhong Wanyin has stopped worrying about money since he started work in his village fish farm and earns more than 20,000 yuan a year. He is also a shareholder in the farm with an investment of 5,000 yuan funded by the government, which has brought him a 20 percent annual dividend.

E-COMMERCE AND TOURISM CUTS POVERTY

E-commerce has helped produce from Jinggangshan's 18 townships reach buyers beyond the mountains, benefiting more than 2,400 people.

"Over 17,000 parcels, worth some 1.6 million yuan, have been sent since this e-commerce service center opened over a year ago," said Huang Xiaohua, head of the e-commerce service center in Huang'ao Township.

Jinggangshan has also capitalized on its fame as the revolutionary heartland. More than 13 million people visited Jinggangshan last year.

Bashang Village offers a one-day training program to experience the life of the Red Army and attracted more than 40,000 participants in 2016.

Lai Puxiu, a villager from Bashang Village, prepares lunch for her visitors every day.

"I charge each person 33 yuan for their meal," Lai, 58, said. "The food is simple and similar to that eaten by Red Army soldiers."

"In the past, we grew crops in a few fields and life was hard," Lai said. "But these days so many visitors come to our village that we started a catering business."

Bashang is home to more than 630 registered residents, but about 400 of them are off seeking their fortunes in the big cities. The village's reinvention of itself with the catering business has brought more than 100 of them back.

Lai Puxiu gets up early to buy ingredients from the nearest town, but also grows vegetables in her backyard.

"My husband and I usually prepare bamboo shoots, pumpkin, eggplant, fish and braised pork in soy sauce," Lai said.

While Lai prepares lunch, she has her visitors pound cooked glutinous rice into paste, a traditional way to make a local snack called "ciba." She charges each visitor 100 yuan for the privilege of making ciba and provides all the ingredients as well as the equipment for making it.

To add some razzmatazz to the visitor experience, Lai has decorated her house "Red style." Inside stands an old stove and a few rickety wooden tables. Outside, flutter a pair of duilian, hanging scrolls of inspirational couplets.

In peak season, she can receive 40 visitors a day. This year, she has catered for about 900 visitors. Other families in Bashang have seen their income increase by an average of 18,000 yuan this year.

"My family hosted 850 people attending the program last year, and earned more than 10,000 yuan by providing room and board," said villager Xiao Fumin.

PRESSING TASK

Poverty alleviation remains a pressing task. The Chinese government has decided to eradicate poverty by 2020, the target year for China to become a "moderately prosperous" society.

According to official figures, China still had 55.75 million people living under the poverty line at the end of 2015. The government has said 10 million people were lifted out of poverty in 2016 and another 10 million will be this year.

A national coordinated development strategy has contributed to poverty reduction in Hebei Province, whose counties bordering on Beijing and Tianjin were once described as a "poverty belt."

One million people emerged from poverty last year in Hebei, but about 2 million remain in miserable conditions. Another 700,000 should be freed from their shackles this year in Hebei through supplying agricultural products to those two rich neighbors. There are plans for a number of resorts in the province to accommodate city residents keen to spend their weekends in the mountains.

Southwest China's Yunnan Province plans to bring 1 million of its 3.5 million poor people above the poverty line in 2017.
 
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What villagers' rise from poverty looks like
By ZHANG YUNBI | CHINA DAILY | Updated: 2017-02-27

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Left: Workers package strawberries at a local production base in Nashan township in Jinggangshan, Jiangxi province. Center: Villagers in Jinggangshan package bamboo fungus for online orders. The packages will be shipped by China Post. Right: Farmers harvest peppers at a greenhouse in Xincheng township. HUANG ZEYUAN/CHINA DAILY

In communities of Jinggangshan, residents learn to create sustainable path to prosperity

Jinggangshan, with its remote, hilly location near the border of Jiangxi and Hunan provinces, was an ideal home in the 1920s for the Communist Party of China and the Red Army-both young at the time.

Now, the area has officially said goodbye to poverty, a major milestone it reached on Sunday, along the country's path toward eradicating poverty by 2020.

The cultural heritage left by the revolutionary era has catalyzed a booming travel industry and led some to a well-off life. The GDP of the city in 2015 was 5.7 billion yuan ($830 million).

Still, the demanding natural conditions dampened some other mountain dwellers' hopes of catching up with China's pace of modernization.

One example illustrates the situation: Although the city has built a road network and a 6-kilometer-long tunnel through a mountain, a drive of more than an hour is still required to reach Shenshan village, one of the most remote communities from downtown.

"When I first visited the village, the road here was a headache. It was all dirt," said Hu Yanxia, 34, who met her husband, Zuo Xiangyun, a villager from Shenshan, in 2002.

They married in 2003. On their wedding day, Zuo carried Hu on his back during the walk home because the pavement ended at the entrance to the village. The car carrying them could go no farther.

To survive in these mountains, full of bamboo and threaded with unpaved back roads, Zuo, grandchild of a Red Army soldier from the revolutionary era, took over the small bamboo business of his father.

The raw materials didn't produce much profit, so Zuo turned to processing the bamboo into various craft pieces-small items like pen holders and slingshots-for greater benefits.

He even purchased a set of laser inscribers and a computer to help customize the pen holders, adding Chinese characters and portraits, as requested by customers.

In February last year, President Xi Jinping paid a visit to Shenshan and visited Zuo's house. Zuo presented Xi items he had made out of bamboo.

Later, Zuo started a restaurant serving local dishes to visitors. His income began to grow.

"Now, my family has around 70,000 yuan a year," he said.

Zuo told China Daily he plans to build a bigger bamboo pavilion to host more customers, and he's thinking about more promotion of local wine packaged in bamboo tubes that he can make himself.

Taking a long view

Zuo is one of the 55.6 million people in China who have risen out of poverty since 2013.

In the 31 years from 1981 to 2012, the country cut 72 percent of the world's poor population, according to the China Poverty Alleviation and Development Report for 2016.

Looking back on China's efforts over the decades, Pakistan's Ambassador to China, Masood Khalid, told China Daily: "It is a miracle to lift almost 700 million people out of poverty."

On his visit to Zuo's village last year, Xi told the residents that "no one should be missed" as the country breaks away from poverty, and he underlined the need to "remove poverty with targeted measures".

At a group study session of the CPC Central Committee's Political Bureau earlier this month, Xi urged reinforced awareness and preparedness for eradicating poverty.

As the regions and residents still in poverty are mostly undeveloped and financially weak, Xi warned that "difficulties of poverty relief will increase in the next few years."

For places like Jinggangshan, whose financial burden is smaller than other areas with little development, the top mission is to build a sustainable poverty-alleviation process and to avoid a return to the grim old days, local officials said.

At a news conference of the Jiangxi provincial government on Sunday, Jinggangshan was officially taken off the list of impoverished areas. The poverty rate has dropped from 13.8 percent at the start of 2014 to 1.6 percent today, meeting the national standard for removal.

Liu Hong, Party chief of Jinggangshan, said the ultimate goal is not removing the city from the list, but leading the local people to a better life. The city will focus on achieving sustained income, spiritual support and taking steps "to make the effects stable and long lasting", Liu said.

To ensure fair, efficient identification of households in need, Jinggangshan sorts out those who have no capability of making a living, according to Huang Changhui, deputy chief of the city's office in charge of poverty relief and migration.

The city has them registered on a regular basis and publishes a list of those receiving governmental assistance for public supervision.

Also, the city offers a fund of 10,000 yuan to each of its more than 1,000 households, and it created a nonprofit investment company with the money after obtaining consent from households.

The company invests in local leading companies and earns an annual interest yield of no less than 15 percent for the households, Huang said.

"The four companies we have invested in return an interest of 12 percent, and even more, and the municipal treasury will make up for any shortfall," Huang said.

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Targeting bureaucracy

Transparency is a high priority. Visitors to poor households that receive assistance from local governments in Jinggangshan may find a placard, hanging high on a wall, stating the name, title and cellphone number of the local official providing assistance.

According to Liu, the Party chief, it's part of the city's effort to ensure full coverage of all the households in need, as well as public supervision of the officials.

"At least one official is assigned to help a poor family, and all of the 3,000-plus officials or Party members in Jinggangshan take part in poverty-relief activities," Liu said.

"They visit the households one by one, thinking and deliberating alongside the villagers on the deep-seated root causes of poverty there in order to find the viable solutions."

Also, Liu said that the city selects those talents who are experts at finding business opportunities, farming and gardening, and introduces them to the poverty relief teams.

Training during winter and spring is offered to batches of Party members to brief them on the latest policies and production techniques.

Xie Ganghua, a local farmer, stopped working as a migrant worker away from his hometown and returned to Jinggangshan's Xincheng township.

He started planting vegetables-such as peppers-in greenhouses in July. He credits his techniques to technicians introduced by the local government.

"The seeds are also provided by the local government," Xie said. "Although I work longer hours now every day, I can also take care of my family."

He is now running seven greenhouses, with a tight schedule and heavy workload every day. "I get up at 5:30 am and arrive at the greenhouses at 6:30," he said.

Then he sends freshly harvested vegetables to market in the nearby township and sells them before he returns and finishes his greenhouse work at 5:30 pm.

"The greenhouses need to be attended on daily basis. If the temperature runs high, I open them. If it is too cold, I keep them closed," Xie said.

And making money is not easy. Each of the greenhouses makes a profit of 2,000 yuan every six months, he said.

Looking ahead

Two major factors that throw families back into poverty are medical fees resulting from major illnesses and the cost of higher education, according local officials and residents.

The family of Xiao Fumin, 63, a local farmer, suffered a huge financial blow when it shouldered the daunting cost of treatment for his daughter's toxemia.

"She needs dialysis twice a week, and the medical insurance covers 10,000 yuan each year," Xiao said.

Now the burden is being eased as his family runs a restaurant that is supported by his village.

Bashang village, which once hosted the Red Army, now hosts tourists and groups of officials from all parts of the country for training and studies. The visitors are sometimes introduced to households like Xiao's.

Huang Chengzhong, Party chief of Shenshan village, said that a lasting financial capability in tackling poverty partly stems from the increasing strength of the village's collective economy, which means businesses run by cooperatives of residents, Huang said.

The village-run businesses include tourism, as well as the planting and processing of tea, bamboo and yellow peaches.

"As long as the village-run collective economy is strong enough, those financially challenged households will be helped by the village," Huang said.

Another problem is the widespread ignorance of the disparity between rural and urban areas, particularly the gap in the access to skills and technologies.

When tourists flock into inns and restaurants located in Zuo Xiangyun's village, many express amazement at the great changes happening there.

Some say they believe that the local villagers' rise to well-off status is easy to see because visitors come to honor the revolution's hometown, which brings a steady flow of cash.

However, recalling his experience of learning the technique of getting the laser machine and software to run for inscribing bamboo penholders, Zuo said achieving success has its frustrations.

Some of those from whom he sought help didn't want to share their techniques, while some others were not quite proficient enough to get the equipment running as expected.

"So I needed five or six teachers before I fully mastered the technique," Zuo said.

Another awkward fact is that although Zuo got broadband internet service installed in his house several years ago, he has not yet enjoyed Wi-Fi.

It was simply because no one informed him that he could replace the cable router with an updated one with wireless functions.

As a result, he uses GPRS, or 4G, signals to surf the Web and receive payments via WeChat, resulting in a monthly telecommunication cost of around 100 yuan.
 
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