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China poverty alleviation, raising standard of living

https://www.irinnews.org/feature/2017/04/11/china-relocate-millions-people-away-disaster-zones

China to relocate millions of people away from disaster zones
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Joanna Chiu/IRIN
Joanna Chiu

LU JIA/CHINA, 11 April 2017

How do you relocate a population bigger than Russia’s and Germany’s combined? Look to China over the next decade as it plans to resettle 250 million people in a bid to fight poverty, prioritizing the first relocations for those living in areas prone to natural disasters.

The government says it has already assisted in resettling 1.2 million “ecological migrants” and aims to move 1.4 million more people “away from geological threats” by 2020, according to its five-year social and economic development plan.

The mass relocations form part of China’s evolving strategy on disaster preparedness and poverty alleviation, which involves shifting people away from remote areas and building up city centres with the aim of raising overall living standards. The government hopes to eliminate poverty by 2020 and resettle 250 million people into urban centres by 2026.

Moving people out of disaster-prone regions is an important part of the plan, as 65 percent of China’s landmass is mountainous or hilly, and the poor are most likely to live in areas prone to landslides.

Baicheng County in Jilin Province is 1,287 kilometres from the coast, and much of the land there is infertile and vulnerable to drought. As one of the poorest areas in northeast China, it is on the frontlines of the government’s campaign to eliminate poverty.

Twenty years ago, people who now live in Lu Jia village in Baicheng County, were among the first rural poor to be resettled from areas where water was scarce and disasters such as landslides were a constant risk.

“This place is much better. We were too far away and the earth was too dry before. Here the land is expensive, but at least it is fertile,” said Xu Dong, a 52-year-old villager who now grows vegetables as part of a farmers’ cooperative.

After their relocation, the villagers initially lived in simple, brick homes. But following a fresh round of government-funded construction last year, all 900 residents received free apartments in new, five-story buildings.

The villagers say they have mixed feelings about the modern apartments, which have running water and heating, but make it more difficult to chat with neighbours and have eroded their sense of community. But nobody regrets moving here.

“There’s an elementary school 25 kilometres away, which is not bad at all, and we will have a nursery soon right here in the complex,” said another villager, Jiang Fa, gesturing at cranes overhead.

Disaster-stricken land
China’s poverty alleviation efforts have been hindered by the fact it is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world. From 2011 to 2015, the country saw more than 60,000 geological disasters, which killed over 2,000 people and caused losses totalling nearly $3 billion, the official Xinhua news agency reported, citing statistics from the Ministry of Land and Resources.

Last summer, China’s second-costliest flood season on record left at least 1,000 people dead and wiped out 54,390 square kilometres of cropland, according to the Ministry of Civil Affairs.

Climate change is partly to blame, with increased flooding and drought threatening much of the country, including major economic hubs, according to the Environmental Change Institute at Oxford University. But experts say that authorities have long responded in an ad hoc way to the threat of natural disasters.

“China had, until recently, been slow to develop new institutions for managing risks and responding to crisis situations,” Richard Suttmeier, of the University of Oregon, wrote in a 2011 paper.

It wasn’t until 2006, he noted, that China promulgated its “National Plan for Environmental Emergency Response” and established an Environmental Emergency Response Centre.

Relocation as a disaster mitigation strategy figured prominently in China’s 2014 urbanisation plan and is now a top priority. In addition to Jilin, the government has identified a number of other eastern and central provinces where people will be relocated away from areas prone to natural disasters, including Hebei, Shanxi, Anhui, Fujian, Henan, Hubei and Shandong.

Speedy construction
The apartment buildings in Lu Jia were completed in just a few months between June and October 2016. Residents say they see no problems so far, but they also know that “Chinese buildings are not meant to last,” said villager Lu Xun, crouching on a slab of styrofoam that was discarded by builders.

The average amount of time that Chinese structures remain liveable is 25 to 30 years, compared to a century or more in many developed countries, according to the state-run China Daily newspaper.

It is also unclear if people in areas identified as at-risk are given any choice about whether they want to move. Lu Jia villagers told IRIN that their elected village chiefs made the decisions on behalf of their communities. They did not get any compensation, although everyone receives a standard social welfare allowance of $15 a month with an additional $12 a month for those over 60 years old.

Another point of controversy is whether resettlement projects could contribute to the marginalization of ethnic minority cultures. Government backed migration has often involved moving the Han – China’s most populous ethnic group – into minority areas. These include Tibet, which China annexed in 1951, and Xinjiang, where the government has cracked down on protests by members of the indigenous Uighur ethnic minority.

Kevin Carrico, a lecturer in Chinese Studies at Australia’s Macquarie University, said there is a risk that the government could use relocations away from disaster-prone areas as an excuse to further change the demographics in minority regions.

“It's difficult to say whether environmental reasons are a cover and if this is necessarily planned in advance, but it's certainly a convenient side effect,” he told IRIN.

A Ministry of Land and Resources spokesperson declined to be interviewed about relocation programmes, and told IRIN that more information would be made public soon.
 
Chinese universities to recruit more poor students
Source: Xinhua| 2017-04-14 15:43:47|Editor: Mengjiao Liu

BEIJING, April 14 (Xinhua) -- China's top-level universities will recruit more students from rural and poor regions in 2017, according to a circular by the Ministry of Education Friday.

Universities, in a regional special program, plan to enroll 10 percent more poor students in 2017 than in 2016.

In a national special program, universities will enroll 63,000 students from underdeveloped regions in 2017, covering impoverished counties, counties with poverty-relief allowances as well as areas in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The circular also called for the setting up of a strict examination system to ensure the quality of candidates.

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China to designate 2 million units of public housing in 2017
Source: Xinhua| 2017-04-17 23:05:08|Editor: Mu Xuequan

BEIJING, April 17 (Xinhua) -- China will create 2 million units of public rental housing in 2017 to provide affordable housing for low-income people, said a senior official.

Accelerating the construction and allocation of public rental housing is high on the agenda of the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development (MOHURD), said Vice Minister Lu Kehua.

China sees public rental housing as a way of providing homes for families who have been priced out of the property market and has invested billions of yuan.

In recent years China has increased subsidies and credit support for such housing, and, by the end of 2016, a total of 11.3 million families had been homed.

Lu, speaking to Xinhua in an interview, said that his ministry will work with the national economic planning body and the ministry of finance to increase support for the program.

Under China's the system, low-income families can also rent apartments themselves and receive government subsides.

Lu asked local governments in some regions to lower the threshold for the public housing system and give migrant workers access. Most regions had already done so.
 
Regardless of how one feels about China, this is admirable stuff. China did do a great job of pulling a huge amount of people out of poverty in a very short span of time.
 
Xi encourages bigger role of Internet Plus in poverty alleviation
(Chinadaily.com.cn) 09:40, April 20, 2017

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President Xi Jinping, also head of the central Internet security and informatization leading group, presides over a symposium on cyberspace security and informatization in Beijing, April 19, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

President Xi Jinping once said that poverty alleviation is an important part of his work and he spent most energy on it. He pledged that the government will lift the country's 70 million poor people above the poverty line by 2020.

Presiding over a symposium on cyberspace security and informatization on April 19, 2016, Xi said online services should play a bigger role in reducing poverty by promoting agricultural goods produced by impoverished people and by making high-quality education accessible to more children in remote mountainous region via internet.

He connected internet with the work of poverty relief for the first time, providing a new direction for the cause.

Internet Plus ushers a new stage for poverty relief

When Xi visited Southwest China's Guizhou province in June 2015, he said that poverty relief should be precisely targeted as it determines whether poverty alleviation will be successful or not.

As Internet Plus becomes a national strategy, "internet plus targeted poverty alleviation" isviewed as an important impetus for the development of the impoverished areas.

Though the direction is clear, just as Xi pointed out on April 19 last year, the internet infrastructure remains a weak link among these villages.

To overcome this weakness, a national plan on internet-based poverty alleviation was issued in Oct which outlines five projects - broadband coverage, rural e-commerce, access to online education resources, information services and internet philanthropy.

The plan aims to provide broadband network coverage to more than 90 percent of poverty-stricken villages, provide access to e-commerce services in all townships and improve the health, literacy and employment competitiveness of impoverished people through online medical, educational and cultural services, according to Xu Yu, director of informatization development bureau of Cyberspace Administration of China.

Precise targeting of anti-poverty programs

During his visit to Chongqing municipality in January 2016, Xi said the success of development-oriented poverty relief lies in “precise and targeted poverty alleviation efforts.”

Precisely targeting those in need is a key step before allocating policy and fund to the impoverished households.

"After scanning the QR code, the updated data of every impoverished household show up. It reveals the latest situation of those in poverty," said a government staff member engaged in poverty relief in Linshui county, Guang'an of southwest China's Sichuan province.

The county established a dynamic database which includes gathering data of all impoverished households in the county every March. It has also put up a QR code on the door of every household for people to scan and know the progress of poverty relief work.

Last year, a total of 81,800 impoverished people located in 152 villages were registered. Internet Plus provided the new idea and technology to accelerate the work of poverty relief.

Role of Internet Plus in tackling poverty

Xi emphasized several times that providing children in impoverished areas access to good education is an important task in poverty alleviation and development, and is also an important method of stopping inter-generational transmission of poverty. He also suggested that "Internet plus education" should be a solution to the problem.

Recently, young teachers at Jingzhoujie Primary School, a key school in Xiangyang, Central China's Hubei province, gave English lessons to a dozen of students in Youfangjie Primary School in Baokang county via video streaming.

The lessons were part of Xiangyang city's "Banbantong", literally meaning class to class, project. Currently, 'Banbantong" project covers more than 98 percent of schools, 90 percent of teachers and 50 percent of students.

Hubei province has vigorously promoted the use of internet in schools in rural areas in recent years, in the hope of sharing high quality educational resources in rural areas and narrowing the gap between urban and rural students.

Medical resources, just like educational resources, are unevenly distributed and high-quality resources are scarce in rural areas. Some rural people fall back in poverty due to medical bills. "Internet plus medical" can be a big solution in tackling the issue.

On March 15, an internet hospital subordinated to the First Affiliated Hospital of Henan University of Science and Technology began operation in Luoyang. At the same time, People's hospital of Luanchuan County, 15 township health centers and 35 village health centers in the poverty-stricken county also opened their remote network medical platforms, providing a channel to connect medical experts in the city hospital with rural patients.

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Poverty alleviation projects carried out in China's Guangxi
Xinhua | 2017-04-25

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A villager shows a cultured scorpion in Nongjingtun village of Qibainong township in Dahua Yao autonomous county, South China's Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region, March 21, 2017. Poverty-stricken towns in Guangxi region, such as Qibai, Bansheng and Yalong, are featured with harsh living environment due to water and cropland shortage in the karst landform. Local government has made efforts to carry out poverty alleviation projects, such as building water boxes, renovating thatched houses and developing poultry and livestock industry for local residents. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Power workers renew electric transmission line in Nongjing village of Qibainong township in Dahua Yao autonomous county. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Photo taken on March 24, 2017 shows spiral terraced fields piled up by stones in Nongcong village of Bansheng township in Dahua Yao autonomous county. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Workers carry water pipes for building a drought resistance project on a mountain road in Nonglei village of Bansheng township in Dahua Yao autonomous county. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Villagers have their home relocated at places adjacent to a road in Nongteng village of Qibainong township. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Aerial photo taken on April 21, 2017 shows a village road under construction in Bansheng township. [Photo/Xinhua]

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Lan Zhiping (L), village secretary of Nongxiong Village, examines poultry growth in a poverty-stricken family in Nongxiong village of Qibainong township. [Photo/Xinhua]

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A villager sells pigs in Nonghe Village of Qibainong township. [Photo/Xinhua]
 
New photovoltaic generation project to relieve poverty
chinadaily.com.cn | 2017-04-29


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A group of workers install solar power panels at a 40-hectare (400,000 square meters) photovoltaic generator site in Linqun county in East China's Anhui province on Saturday, the first day of the three-day Labor’s Day holiday. The site lies along a river in the county’s Lvzhai township and represents a total investment of more than 200 million yuan ($29 million). Expected to be put into operation before the end of June, the project is one of the major measures taken by the local government to tackle rural poverty, as each of the 800 local poverty-stricken households will get an annual subsidy of 3,000 yuan from the investor. [Photo by Zhu Lixin / China Daily]

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Workers install solar power panels at a photovoltaic generator site in Linqun county in Anhui province on Saturday.[Photo by Zhu Lixin / China Daily]

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A worker stands on a steel beam at a photovoltaic generator site in Linqun county in Anhui province on Saturday.[Photo by Zhu Lixin / China Daily]

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Workers install solar power panels at a photovoltaic generator site in Linqun county in Anhui province on Saturday.[Photo by Zhu Lixin / China Daily]

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Workers install solar power panels at a photovoltaic generator site in Linqun county in Anhui province on Saturday.[Photo by Zhu Lixin / China Daily]
 
Chinese efforts at poverty alleviation are impressive, to say the least.

After the work is done in China, it would be nice if the Chinese government offered to build large scale cities in India. I don't see India being able to handle its poverty challenge on our own. Need all the help we can get.
 
Yunnan shares its anti-poverty experience with world
By He Shan & Gao Zhan
China.org.cn, April 29, 2017

The International Department of the CPC Central Committee held a promotion meeting in Beijing on April 27 to share Yunnan's poverty alleviation measures with visiting foreign parties, ambassadors and diplomats.

Under the theme "targeted poverty alleviation -- no ethnic group shall be left behind," the promotion meeting took Yunnan's poverty alleviation experience as an example to introduce President Xi Jinping's new vision, thinking and strategies on China's governance.

Yunnan Province in Southwest China is one of China's undeveloped provinces with many ethnic minorities.

Song Tao, minister of the International Department of the CPC Central Committee, said the practice of Yunnan Province in eradicating poverty is a good example of China's anti-poverty drive and proves that the targeted poverty reduction strategies outlined by President Xi Jinping is key to achieving poverty targets.

After the 18th National Party Congress,the party pledged to wipe out poverty by 2020. A total of 55.64 million people were lifted out of poverty between 2013 and 2016.

"The CPC would like to share the experience in poverty reduction with the international community and help neighboring and developing countries explore their own paths of poverty alleviation," he added.

Chen Hao, secretary of the CPC Yunnan provincial committee, revealed that the 8 million people living in poverty in the southwestern province in 2012, more than 4.4 million had improved their situation by the end of 2016.

Mark van den Boogaard, senior policy adviser for the United Nations Development Programme, and Javier Miranda, president of Broad Front in Uruguay, have recently returned from a research trip to Yunnan. They said that they were impressed by Yunnan's success in fighting poverty.

Mark said, "I was impressed by two things. One is the CPC's comprehensive guidance and the other is the joint efforts of society in the poverty alleviation work."

Foreign guests who have visited China for many times hailed China's anti-poverty drive, saying it has set a good example for the world and the CPC's efforts to lift millions of people out of poverty is unprecedented.
 
Chinese efforts at poverty alleviation are impressive, to say the least.

After the work is done in China, it would be nice if the Chinese government offered to build large scale cities in India. I don't see India being able to handle its poverty challenge on our own. Need all the help we can get.
Doubt it. The antagonism and paranoia from New Delhi is too much. China can't even convince India to join OBOR which would improve infrastructure and boost local investment. I suspect the India media will spin any efforts as a secret plot to help transport arms for Maoist rebels in poor rural areas.
 
Doubt it. The antagonism and paranoia from New Delhi is too much. China can't even convince India to join OBOR which would improve infrastructure and boost local investment. I suspect the India media will spin any efforts as a secret plot to help transport arms for Maoist rebels in poor rural areas.

Yes it's not right that so few Chinese infrastructure projects are there in India. A certain level of distrust is there, but it is for both sides to resolve. It is not that only the Indian government and media are needlessly sentimental over useless things.

But there is time, as India's infrastructure needs are not going away in a hurry. Expressways, HSR, power, and new cities, we need them all. China is gathering some great expertise in these areas and can be a one-stop solution.

Having said that, maybe there is some sense in being watchful as to how the major projects China is implementing overseas fare. There are important lessons yet to be learnt and we can have the benefit of hindsight.
 
Yes it's not right that so few Chinese infrastructure projects are there in India. A certain level of distrust is there, but it is for both sides to resolve. It is not that only the Indian government and media are needlessly sentimental over useless things.

But there is time, as India's infrastructure needs are not going away in a hurry. Expressways, HSR, power, and new cities, we need them all. China is gathering some great expertise in these areas and can be a one-stop solution.

Having said that, maybe there is some sense in being watchful as to how the major projects China is implementing overseas fare. There are important lessons yet to be learnt and we can have the benefit of hindsight.

I think this factor is overplayed. China gets deals in India, be it trains and what not. As to roads and rails, I'm not even sure how much foreign influence is in China. Take this, Chinese HSR cost hundreds of billions of dollars. Chinese investment in CPEC is over 60 billion, but that is over a wide range of areas. CPEC has been hailed as one of the biggest investments ever.

For a country like India, there just isn't anyone with that much money to invest, nor is it that profitable anyways, and needs a nation's subsidies.

Finally, no FDI can overtake a country's own initiatives, and to be honest, how fast is India moving in this sector anyways, relative to size.

So all in all, I don't think China is doing much worse in India than anyone else really.
 
I think this factor is overplayed. China gets deals in India, be it trains and what not. As to roads and rails, I'm not even sure how much foreign influence is in China. Take this, Chinese HSR cost hundreds of billions of dollars. Chinese investment in CPEC is over 60 billion, but that is over a wide range of areas. CPEC has been hailed as one of the biggest investments ever.

For a country like India, there just isn't anyone with that much money to invest, nor is it that profitable anyways, and needs a nation's subsidies.

Finally, no FDI can overtake a country's own initiatives, and to be honest, how fast is India moving in this sector anyways, relative to size.

So all in all, I don't think China is doing much worse in India than anyone else really.

IMO, China has its hands full right now with all the projects it is implementing. There is no need to rush into signing new projects right now.

As for roads and rail, things will sort themselves out through a process of competitive bidding as they should. However, what specifically interests me is Chinese abilities at making large cities from scratch - something that no other country has done at such pace. India also needs to move hundreds of millions into new cities. No better party to approach in that regard than China.

Funding will have to be a hybrid mix of our own money and development funding based on future accruals, as is the case with all such projects. But yes, it all depends on how badly we want it. HSR and new cities are capacity builders - they don't make money in themselves, especially in India.
 
A program that Taiwan province desperately needs. The rents in big cities are really killing new graduates/young people if they are not lucky enough to have property/money inherited from/provided by parents.

You're in Taiwan? How's the situation for housing there? I've read that Taipei's housing income ratio is catching up to HK levels of unaffordability. How true is that?
 

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