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China poverty alleviation, raising standard of living

China Focus: Minority students rely on university for better future
Source: Xinhua| 2017-07-30 01:05:05|Editor: Mu Xuequan



NANNING, July 29 (Xinhua) -- Ya Qiaoli has been waiting eagerly for her university admission letter, at her home in a mountainous village in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, ever since she was told that she has been admitted to Guangxi University of Nationalities.

For her, the letter is crucial. It means she can spend the next four years in Nanning, the regional capital, studying finance.

Ya scored 549 points out of 750 points in June's national college entrance exam, better known as the gaokao. The points guarantee university acceptance, yet they are not enough for her to apply for a good major.

"I was able to choose either a good university or a good major only after I got the bonus points for ethnic minorities," Ya said.

As a Zhuang ethnic student, Ya got 10 bonus points, according to a national policy that allows ethnic minority students to gain as many as 20 bonus gaokao points.

The policy helps ethnic minority students, many from remote and impoverished areas with poor educational standards, to reduce their disadvantage in the exam.

Ya studies in the only high school in Fengshan county, her hometown. Located in Hechi city, it is a national-level poverty-stricken county. Among a total of 1,133 students who took gaokao this year, about 60 percent were ethnic minority students, mainly from the Zhuang and Yao ethnic groups. According to the policy, Zhuang students can get 10 bonus points and Yao students can get 20.

When the recruitment was finished, 97.7 percent of students were admitted to universities or junior colleges.

"The figures increased obviously compared with 10 years ago, as a result of both improved education quality and favorable policies," said Luo Yingyang, deputy principal of Fengshan County High School.

In Leye county, a national-level poverty-stricken county in Baise city of Guangxi, more than 20 percent of all 789 students taking the gaokao this year were admitted to universities, with most of the rest admitted to vocational colleges.

Huang Bingzhong, principal of Leye County High School, said that for many students whose families are poor, university entrance could guarantee that they would be lifted out of poverty.

"Sending a child to university or college is the best way for a family to get out of the mountains," Huang said.

China sees education as a key method in its poverty alleviation efforts, so it has launched favorable gaokao policies for students from rural and poor areas.

In April, the Ministry of Education announced that top-level universities would enroll 63,000 students from a number of underdeveloped regions in 2017, about 3,000 more than in 2016. Recruiting of poor students into provincial-level colleges is expected to grow by 10 percent this year.

Under these requirement, in Guangxi, a total of 2,507 students have been recruited by 154 universities, 300 more than in 2016.

Guangxi has the most number of ethnic minority people in China, and it is also one of the least developed regions, with 28 national-level poverty-stricken counties, in which 11 are ethnic minority autonomous counties.

With the number of school-age children growing, many poor counties face a shortage of competent teachers, funds and schools.

Principal Luo said the school was designed to accommodate a maximum of 2,200 students, but currently there are nearly 3,500 students. The school lacks not only classrooms but new facilities.

Low salaries also makes it hard for teachers to stay.

"Every year, several teachers resign, and it is very difficult for us to hire new ones," he said.

Leye County High School has cooperated with other higher qualified schools so that students can have lessons given by teachers of these schools online. Yet more methods are hoped to be launched.

More funding is needed to improve the educational conditions such as buildings and facilities in poor areas, said Ya Qiming, an official of education in Donglan county, another national-level poverty-stricken county in Hechi.

"Teachers' salaries and welfare should also be improved so that they would like to stay in these areas," he said.
 
New MRI equipment ferries hope to remote regions
By ZHANG YU and YUAN HUI in Baotou, Inner Mongolia | China Daily | Updated: 2017-08-02 07:46

A new vehicle that can transport magnetic resonance imaging, or MRI equipment, and other key medical devices has been introduced to the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, in an important initiative that will provide treatment in remote areas from otherwise relatively immovable heavyweight medical machines.

The vehicle, the Chiying A30, was made by Baotou-based medical and hospital equipment manufacturer XBO Medical Systems Co Ltd.

General Manager Wang Yongzhong said the vehicle is China's first mobile transporter for MRI equipment, which is widely used in hospitals to get internal pictures and scan the anatomy and organs of patients.

"Usually, a MRI machine is too large and heavy to move around and patients can only get their bodies' images in a hospital," Wang said.

But poor people in rural areas usually can't easily get access to advanced hospitals.

Inner Mongolia had an estimated 560,000 poverty-stricken people by the end of 2016, most of whom live in distant rural areas, according to the regional government.

The autonomous region is pushing to improve medical services for poor and remote areas, to equip them with permanent as well as mobile medical equipment.

The target is that by 2020, some 90 percent of people in the autonomous region will be able to receive such medical treatment.

"Mobile medical devices will be able to help us reach the goal," Wang said.

The new vehicle is not only an ambulance that can only ferry sick or injured people to hospital and provide simple medical services.

Wang said it would also have a variety of ancillary applications in different fields, operating in remote and poverty-stricken areas that lack hospitals and sophisticated medical devices.

He added the MRI machine inside the vehicle was a smaller and portable version of the standard hospital-bound model and was equipped with remote monitoring function. Even if there were no doctors in the vehicle, treatment schedules can be provided via the remote monitoring device.

In addition, the portable service is linked to cloud computing and test results can be transmitted to computers in hospitals, ensuring an optimal diagnosis by doctors.

Aside from the MRI and remote monitoring devices, other medical key equipment for the examination and treatment of patients is also available in the vehicle.

XBO was founded in 2010, with registered capital of 500 million yuan ($74 million). Its main shareholder, with a 40 percent stake, is China Northern Rare Earth (Group) High-Tech Co Ltd, one of the country's leading rare earth companies.

Its main products are magnetic resonance imaging machines which use rare earth-powered magnets.

According to the local government, the Baotou region holds an estimated 43.5 million metric tons of rare earth, accounting for more than 80 percent of China's total reserves and 30 percent of the world's reserves.

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China to offer free cures to cataract patients in poverty
Source: Xinhua| 2017-08-09 16:26:15|Editor: Xiang Bo



BEIJING, Aug.9 (Xinhua) -- China plans to offer free treatment to impoverished cataract patients, according to a plan published Wednesday.

The poverty alleviation and health authorities are building a long-term mechanism to cover all cataract patients living in poverty by 2020.

The plan specifies requirements for hospitals, patients and monitoring quality of cataract surgeries.

Cataracts are the primary cause of blindness in China, and increasing numbers of young people suffering from them.

The Cataract Surgery Rate (CSR), the number of procedures per million people, went over to 1,500 in 2015 in China.

The number is expected to reach 2,000, according to the national project for eye health by 2020.

China had spent over 100 million U.S. dollars on cataract surgery by 2014, according to World Health Organization.

In addition, a mobile hospital called Lifeline Express has helped more than 180,000 cataract patients since 1997.
 
Assistance programs allow more rural students to attend university
Source: Xinhua| 2017-08-29 19:20:32|Editor: Xiang Bo



BEIJING, Aug. 29 (Xinhua) -- Chinese colleges and universities admitted 100,000 students from rural and underdeveloped areas in 2017, a 9.3 percent increase from those in 2016, according to the Ministry of Education.

China has implemented favorable college entrance policies, including enrollment programs at national, regional and university levels, to enable more students from rural and poor areas to go to university.

In the national program, the requirements to be accepted at key colleges and universities, those affiliated to central ministries and provincial governments, have been lowered for students from impoverished counties.

The regional program helps students receive higher quality education in their own provinces and regions, while outstanding high school graduates from rural areas can be admitted to top-level universities under the Ministry of Education through the university-level program.

In 2017, nearly 64,000 students from poverty-stricken counties were enrolled in universities thanks to assistance from the national program.

The regional program admitted 16.2 percent more rural students than those in 2016 and an additional 9,500 exceptional rural students were accepted through the university-level program, the ministry said.

"Going to university is the best way for children from poor families to lift themselves out of poverty," said the principal of a high school in an impoverished county in south China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region.

"We need to improve the enrollment rate for rural students," said Xie Huanzhong, an official with the Ministry of Education.

In 2016, Chinese higher education institutions admitted 7.48 million students for undergraduate study, according to the ministry.
 
China lifts 13.9 million people out of poverty each year
Xinhua, August 29, 2017

China lifted 13.91 million people out of poverty each year from 2012 to 2016, and the annual per capita income in impoverished rural areas has grown 10.7 percent every year, according to a report from the State Council Tuesday.

The report on poverty relief work was submitted for review at a five-day bimonthly session of the National People's Congress (NPC) Standing Committee, which opened Monday.

"The State Council has always put a lot of effort into poverty relief. The government work reports in the past four years all promised to lift at least 10 million out of poverty," said Liu Yongfu, director of the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation and Development.

As of the end of 2016, there were 43.35 million people in China living below the country's poverty line of 2,300 yuan (344.30 U.S. dollars) of annual income (as constant with 2010 prices), accounting for about 3 percent of China's population.

About 775,000 officials have been sent to impoverished areas for poverty relief work, said the report.

China has set 2020 as the target year to complete the building of a "moderately prosperous society," which requires the eradication of poverty.

To achieve the target, China needs to bring more than 10 million people out of poverty every year, meaning nearly one million people per month or 20 people per minute.
 
Commentary: Eliminating poverty, the Chinese way

Source: Xinhua| 2017-09-02 22:18:33|Editor: Liangyu


BEIJING, Sept. 2 (Xinhua) -- Chinese President Xi Jinping has a history of working to alleviate poverty. He personally led a campaign to end poverty in Ningde Prefecture, southeastern China's Fujian Province, as early as 1988, and is now leading China toward a poverty-free future.

"The weak birds must start earlier than others,"
Xi, then-secretary of Communist Party of China (CPC) Ningde Prefectural Committee, told local officials, according to the full text of his remarks at a symposium on poverty relief in north China's Shanxi Province on June 23, which was made public Thursday.

Confident that "constant drops wear away a stone," Xi led local people to work incessantly to alleviate poverty in the prefecture.

Some of Xi's speeches in Ningde were later compiled into a book titled "Up and Out of Poverty," which analysts said could serve as a general guide on China's experience in poverty alleviation.

Ningde was not the only "weak bird" that strived to catch up with others. At the end of 2016, more than 43 million people, or about 3 percent of China's population, lived under the country's poverty line of 2,300 yuan (349 U.S. dollars) of annual income in 2010 constant prices.

China's top leadership has remained aware of the arduous task they are facing. Since becoming the general secretary of the CPC Central Committee in 2012, Xi has placed poverty alleviation on top of the CPC agenda and called it "the baseline task for building a moderately prosperous society," which the country strives to achieve by 2020.

At the symposium in Shanxi, Xi sat down with Party officials from provincial to county levels, discussing ways they could help the "weakest birds" get a head start.

"Eradicating poverty has always been a tough battle, while eradicating poverty in extremely poor areas is the hardest fight of all," Xi said.

Fortunately, China's finest are taking the frontline in the fight to eradicate poverty. By the end of 2016, about 775,000 officials had been sent to rural areas to design tailored poverty relief programs for and with the local communities.

The banks followed. As of the end of 2016, outstanding loans from financial institutions for poverty alleviation totaled 2.5 trillion yuan, with 818.1 billion yuan in new loans in 2016.

From 2013 to 2016, 55.64 million rural people, or more than 10 million each year, were lifted out of poverty in China.

Figures aside, benefits have been seen and not just in terms of money. An example cited by Xi was a village in central China's Hunan Province where men had difficulty finding wives because the poverty of the village was well-known. Following improvements to the local economy, 20 single men were married and their wives joined them to begin a new life in the village.

To realize the ambitious goal of eradicating poverty by 2020, China still needs to lift more than 10 million people out of poverty every year.

Creating jobs or offering training will not work so well for many of those who remain in poverty -- particularly the old, the sick, and the disabled. In response, China has decided to take the time to patiently work with the poor on a case-by-case basis.

In its essence, this precision poverty relief adopts varied policies to different regions according to their needs. For those living in remote areas with few natural resources, the government has offered assistance to relocate; for people in ecologically fragile areas, the government has provided compensation; for the sick and the disabled, the government has increased local medical care.

"Our experiences have proven that abject poverty is not formidable. As long as we pay great attention, think correctly, take effective measures, and work in a down-to-earth way, abject poverty is absolutely conquerable," Xi said.

What sounds like a tall order is becoming reality step by step. Chinese leaders are pragmatic enough to set reasonable goals, which make sure that the rural poor will at least have food to eat, clothes to wear, and places to live in by 2020.

After all, it is a vision that the CPC has always wanted to realize since the very beginning of its founding -- when China prospers, it will leave no one behind.
 
One in three Chinese children faces an education apocalypse. An ambitious experiment hopes to save them

By Dennis Normile
Sep. 21, 2017 , 2:00 PM

Glasses askew and gray hair tousled, Scott Rozelle jumps into a corral filled with rubber balls and starts mixing it up with several toddlers. The kids pelt the 62-year-old economist with balls and, squealing, jump onto his lap. As the battle rages, Rozelle chatters in Mandarin with mothers and grandmothers watching the action.

Elsewhere in this early childhood education center in central China, youngsters are riding rocking horses, clambering on a jungle gym, thumbing through picture books, or taking part in group reading. Once a week, caregivers get one-on-one coaching on how to read to toddlers and play educational games. The center is part of an ambitious experiment Rozelle is leading that aims to find solutions to what he sees as a crisis of gargantuan proportions in China: the intellectual stunting of roughly one-third of the population. "This is the biggest problem China is facing that nobody's ever heard about," says Rozelle, a professor at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.

Surveys by Rozelle's team have found that more than half of eighth graders in poor rural areas in China have IQs below 90, leaving them struggling to keep up with the fast-paced official curriculum. A third or more of rural kids, he says, don't complete junior high. Factoring in the 15% or so of urban kids who fall at the low end of IQ scores, Rozelle makes a stunning forecast: About 400 million future working-age Chinese, he says, "are in danger of becoming cognitively handicapped."

Among Chinese academics, that projection "is controversial," says Mary Young, a pediatrician and child development specialist formerly of the World Bank Institute in Washington, D.C. But although experts may debate the numbers, they are united on the enormity of the problem. "There is definitely a tremendous urban-rural gap" in educational achievement, says Young, who is leading pilot interventions for parents of young children in impoverished rural areas for the government-affiliated China Development Research Foundation in Beijing.

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A desolate classroom reflects the limited academic opportunities in China's depopulated rural villages.
RURAL EDUCATION ACTION PROGRAM


While China's dynamic urban population thrives, much of rural China is mired in poverty. More than 70 million people in the countryside live on less than $1 a day, according to the World Bank, and children have it particularly hard. On a recent visit to Shaanxi province, at a group of farmsteads isolated in a remote valley, a 27-year-old mother of two says that she would like to send her kids to preschool. But she would have to rent an apartment in town to do so—a prohibitive expense.

Many parents migrate to the booming cities for work, leaving children with grandparents. (China's household registration system requires that children enroll in schools in the district where their parents are registered.) Left-behind children tend to leave school early, eat poorly, and have little cognitive stimulation in the crucial first years of life. Grandparents, with limited education themselves, are poorly equipped to read to the next generation. They sometimes carry swaddled infants on their backs while working their fields, which delays infant motor development, Young says.

Such early deprivation, Rozelle and others say, limits kids' potential for success in life. "There is a massive convergence of evidence" that development in the first 1000 days after a baby's conception sets the stage for later educational achievement and adult health, says Linda Richter, a developmental psychologist at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, who doesn't work with Rozelle.

China's millions of at-risk children could threaten its future. Economic modeling shows that in some low- and middle-income countries, such as India and Tanzania, "the gross domestic product lost to stunting can be more than a country's spending on health," explains Richter, who helped produce a series of papers on early childhood development published online in The Lancet last October. Conversely, she says, "There is a special window of opportunity" for interventions that bolster health and improve parenting.

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Luo Lie, 5, does eye exercises at a rural school. Like many of his peers, he is being raised by grandparents.
KEVIN FRAYER/GETTY IMAGES


That's what Rozelle is setting out to prove—on an unprecedented scale. In 100 villages across Shaanxi, his team of Chinese and foreign collaborators is following 1200 baby-caregiver pairs; half attend the enriching early education centers and half serve as controls. If the intervention works, Rozelle says his team will seek to convince authorities to establish early education centers nationwide. "It will keep China from collapsing," he says.

Rozelle's earlier experiments on health interventions in China had "a real impact on the lives of poor people," says Howard White, a developmental economist with the Oslo-based Campbell Collaboration, which reviews economic and social studies. Rozelle's group, he says, has been "very successful testing things on a small scale, taking them up to the provincial level, and using the findings to influence national policy." Now, Rozelle hopes to have a similar impact with parenting.

Rozelle followed an unlikely path to becoming a crusader for China's infants. He started studying Mandarin in middle school because his father thought it would be a useful skill, and he pursued finance as an undergraduate at the University of California (UC), Berkeley. But he put his courses on hold to spend 3 years studying Chinese in Taiwan. Seeing the island's emergence as an Asian Tiger "got me excited about Asian development," he says.

Later, the poverty he observed backpacking through Southeast Asia and in South America, where he spent 2 years studying Spanish, instilled in him a concern about economic inequality. That led him to pursue a master's degree in development economics at Cornell University. Development economics was "a new, wide-open field," he says. And he had an advantage. "Not too many development economists speak Chinese."

Returning to Cornell for his Ph.D., he began a varied academic career in which China was the one constant. At Stanford and UC Davis, he explored such topics as irrigation investment, genetically modified cotton, and microcredit programs for rural poor. These efforts netted him a national Friendship Award, the highest honor given to foreigners for contributions to China, in 2008. He is also the longtime chairperson of an advisory board to the Chinese Academy of Sciences's (CAS's) Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy.

Rozelle's unorthodox path through academia is matched by his quirky sense of humor. At a recent public talk in English to a general audience in Shanghai, China, he mimed cradling an infant in his arms while he talked about rural parenting. He explained that studies show that investing in early childhood education pays off for society, whereas spending on adult education has negative returns. "You guys are done, sorry," he told the crowd.

In the mid-2000s, Rozelle and his colleagues shifted their focus from agriculture to education. China's economy was growing rapidly, but "children from rural areas with poor educations or in bad health didn't have the capabilities" to take advantage of new economic opportunities, says Luo Renfu, a longtime Rozelle collaborator and economist at Peking University in Beijing.

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In Anshun, China, Luo Hongni, 11 (left), and her brother Luo Gan, 10 (right), carry flowers to be used as animal feed.
KEVIN FRAYER/GETTY IMAGES


The result is a widening gap between urban and rural educational achievement in China, Rozelle says. Many urbanites fit the stereotype of "tiger" parents, pushing kids to excel in school. After hours, their schedules are packed with music and English lessons and sessions at cram schools, which prepare them for notoriously competitive university entrance exams. More than 90% of urban students finish high school.

But only one-quarter of China's children grow up in the relatively prosperous cities. Rural moms have high hopes for their children; Rozelle's surveys have found that 75% say they want their newborns to go to college, and 17% hope their child gets a Ph.D. The statistics belie those hopes: Just 24% of China's working population completes high school.

Rozelle believes such numbers bode ill for China's hopes of joining the ranks of high-income countries. Over the past 70 years, he explains, only 15 countries have managed to climb from middle- to high-income status, among them South Korea and Taiwan. In all those success stories, three-quarters or more of the working population had completed high school while the country was still in the middle-income bracket. These workforces "had the skills to support a high-income economy," Rozelle says. In contrast, in the 79 current middle-income countries, only a third or less of the workforce has finished high school. And China is at the bottom of the pack. School dropouts don't have the skills needed to thrive in a high-income economy, Rozelle says. And, worryingly, the factory jobs that now provide a decent living for those with minimal training are moving from China to lower-wage countries.

Rozelle thinks a lack of opportunity isn't the only factor holding back China's rural children. Physically and mentally, they are also at an increasing disadvantage, hampering their performance in school and their prospects in life.

Childhood in the other China
Compared with peers in the cities, rural kids have higher rates of malnutrition, uncorrected vision problems, and intestinal parasites. Many rural parents leave kids in the care of grandparents. The result, according to a team of economists: the intellectual stunting of roughly one-third of China's population.

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CREDITS: (GRAPHIC) G. GRULLÓN/SCIENCE; (DATA) SCOTT ROZELLE

In 2006, Rozelle gathered many of his research collaborators into a Rural Education Action Program (REAP). Based at Stanford, it has key partner institutions in China, including top schools, such as Peking University, and CAS's Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy in Beijing, which gives REAP credibility with national authorities. REAP also has connections with provincial universities and, through their professors, ties to local officials. (To avoid the scrutiny China gives nongovernmental organizations, Rozelle emphasizes that REAP is an academic entity conducting research.)

REAP's initial studies focused on the quality and cost of rural education. But Rozelle became aware of health issues during a 2009 visit to a rural school with Reynaldo Martorell, a maternal and child health and nutrition specialist at Emory University in Atlanta. "After lunch, all the kids were napping; Rey said they should be running around," Rozelle recalls. Martorell suspected malnutrition, and a preliminary survey proved him correct. Over several years, Rozelle's team conducted 19 surveys in 10 poor provinces covering 133,000 primary school kids. They found that 27% were anemic, an indication of malnutrition; 33% had intestinal worms; and 20% had uncorrected myopia. "If you've got one of these three things," Rozelle says, "you're not going to learn because you're sick."

REAP followed up with trial interventions. At 200 schools, they checked each child's vision and gave them a math test. Then, in half the schools, the kids who needed them got free glasses. A year later, the math scores of the kids with glasses had improved far more than those of peers in the other schools. Vitamin supplements and deworming yielded similar results. Luo says these and other findings helped convince the central government in 2011 to establish a school lunch program now benefiting 20 million rural students daily. "What impresses me about Scott," says Martorell, "is that his work does not end with just publications; he is deeply committed to making sure government officials become aware of the problems and solutions."

But Rozelle believed that he might achieve more by starting with younger children, persuaded by the work of economists showing that investment in the first 1000 days of life yields economic dividends. As he puts it: "The development economics field discovered babies in the past five or so years." Adversity early on—malnutrition or neglect of an infant's physical and emotional needs, for example—can leave cognitive deficits that persist for life. And in REAP, Rozelle had an organization that could do rigorous studies of interventions and their benefits.

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Fluent in Mandarin, Stanford University economist Scott Rozelle enjoys interacting with the rural children in his intervention programs.
RURAL EDUCATION ACTION PROGRAM


In 2013, REAP launched a study enrolling more than 1800 babies, ages 6 to 12 months, and their caregivers from 348 villages in impoverished Shaanxi province. A team took blood samples and measured the height and weight of each infant. An evaluator gave each baby a widely used test—the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development—that measures cognitive, language, and motor skills. Each caregiver answered a questionnaire used to assess the infant's social and emotional status. The tests were repeated three times at 6-month intervals. The team also tracked whether and when a mother had migrated away for work.

On the bright side, Rozelle says, the tests indicated rural kids "don't need help with their motor skills." But 49% of the babies were anemic. And 29% scored below normal on the Bayley test: nearly twice the 15% of babies that naturally fall at the low end of intelligence tests in any population.

The researchers initially focused on nutrition, providing vitamins in the trial's intervention arm. But follow-up tests showed that the supplements had marginal impact and that mental development scores deteriorated in both intervention and control groups.

At that point, Rozelle recalls, the team began to think, "Maybe it's a parenting problem." In spring 2014, REAP started asking caregivers in their study about parenting practices. Only 11% had told a story to their children the previous day, fewer than 5% had read to their children, and only a third reported playing with or singing to their children.

The situation is particularly fraught for "left-behind" children. Fully one-quarter of Chinese children under age 2 are left in the care of relatives at some point, according to UNICEF statistics. Grandparents often end up as the caretakers—and many "are still in a survival mode of thinking," without the time, energy, or education to read to their grandchildren, Young says. The test scores confirm a devastating impact: After mothers left home to work in another city, mental development scores among their children declined significantly and socio-emotional indices "fell apart," Rozelle says. The declines were greatest when a mother left during the child's first year.

REAP was already adapting what's known as the Jamaican intervention. Sally Grantham-McGregor, a physician and child development specialist, devised the strategy to help developmentally stunted children she observed while at the University of the West Indies in Kingston in the 1970s and 1980s. The Jamaican intervention relied on home visits to teach mothers, one-on-one, how to interact with their toddlers using books and toys designed to raise cognitive, language, and motor skills. The REAP team enlisted child education specialists and psychologists at Shaanxi Normal University in Xi'an, the province's capital, to translate and adapt the teaching materials. For coaches, REAP turned to China's National Health and Family Planning Commission, which was seeking new roles for its 1.5 million workers, who had enforced the country's now-ended one-child policy.

REAP then took 513 children-caregiver pairs from the 1800 participants and split them into intervention and control groups. For the next 6 months, the newly trained family planning workers visited intervention homes weekly for coaching using the Jamaican method. In the intervention group, when the mother was present the baby's Bayley scores rose to normal. But when a grandmother was raising the child, the Bayley score barely budged. "We're working hard to figure out why," Rozelle says.

The in-home visits were expensive, trainers sometimes skipped the most isolated families, and caretakers did not always comply. The coaching also did little to relieve the isolation of kids who did not have playmates, or of their mothers. A questionnaire given to mothers who remained at home with their children—often living with in-laws far from their own families and friends—suggested that 40% of them show signs of depression and could benefit from psychiatric help.

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At early childhood development centers, coaches work with caregivers to bolster such parenting skills as reading to children.
RURAL EDUCATION ACTION PROGRAM


Those findings set the stage for REAP's most ambitious experiment yet. To deliver services more cost-effectively, ensure that coaching sessions take place, and relieve isolation for toddlers and caregivers, the team over the past year set up 50 early childhood development centers in villages in Shaanxi province. The centers cost an average of $10,000 each to furnish and equip; their annual running costs range from $60,000 to $100,000. REAP raised the money from charitable foundations and philanthropists. The Shangluo facility, opened in May, is the first of several "supercenters" that will be located in apartment complexes being built in provincial towns to encourage rural residents to move off their isolated plots.

The REAP team will chart the progress of kids who visit the centers against children in 50 villages lacking them. Typical among those children is a 26-month-old girl being raised by her paternal grandparents in the village of Wanghe. Their house sits among a cluster of ramshackle buildings at the end of a dirt track. There are no playmates her age nearby. Her father works a 2-hour drive away in Xi'an, making it home only several times a year. Her mother has deserted the family. The grandmother, the main caregiver, did not even attend primary school. No toys or books are in sight. At an age when most kids have started forming two-word phrases, the girl barely talks. Not surprisingly, she scores dismally on the development test.

Rozelle says that when he sees kids in the randomly selected control villages, "I often want to take them in my arms and move them to the treatment village." But randomized trials are key to demonstrating the benefits of the intervention. Few countries have comparable programs providing all-around support for mothers and babies during a child's first 1000 days. Richter says there are a lot of unanswered questions about how to scale up interventions and adapt them to different cultures, how to support mothers at risk of depression, and how early interventions dovetail with later educational programs.

REAP's studies might provide some answers. The first assessment of the childhood education centers will be done in early 2018. "We hope to follow the kids for as long as we can find funding," says Wang Lei, a Shaanxi Normal University economist and a REAP affiliate. And Rozelle is already trying to convince the central government to set up centers in 300,000 villages across the country. Authorities could solve China's rural cognitive deficit problem, Rozelle says, "if they knew about it and put their minds to it."

The caregivers taking advantage of the centers are convinced of their value. At a center in Huangchuan, a village 30 kilometers north of Shangluo, Zhang Yanli says she has learned a lot about parenting and can see how quickly her 18-month-old daughter is picking up verbal and social skills. The young mother gestures to her older daughter, who is four-and-a-half years old. "I wish there had been a center for her."



One in three Chinese children faces an education apocalypse. An ambitious experiment hopes to save them | Science | AAAS
 
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One in three Chinese children faces an education apocalypse. An ambitious experiment hopes to save them

By Dennis Normile
Sep. 21, 2017 , 2:00 PM

Glasses askew and gray hair tousled, Scott Rozelle jumps into a corral filled with rubber balls and starts mixing it up with several toddlers. The kids pelt the 62-year-old economist with balls and, squealing, jump onto his lap. As the battle rages, Rozelle chatters in Mandarin with mothers and grandmothers watching the action.

Elsewhere in this early childhood education center in central China, youngsters are riding rocking horses, clambering on a jungle gym, thumbing through picture books, or taking part in group reading. Once a week, caregivers get one-on-one coaching on how to read to toddlers and play educational games. The center is part of an ambitious experiment Rozelle is leading that aims to find solutions to what he sees as a crisis of gargantuan proportions in China: the intellectual stunting of roughly one-third of the population. "This is the biggest problem China is facing that nobody's ever heard about," says Rozelle, a professor at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.

Surveys by Rozelle's team have found that more than half of eighth graders in poor rural areas in China have IQs below 90, leaving them struggling to keep up with the fast-paced official curriculum. A third or more of rural kids, he says, don't complete junior high. Factoring in the 15% or so of urban kids who fall at the low end of IQ scores, Rozelle makes a stunning forecast: About 400 million future working-age Chinese, he says, "are in danger of becoming cognitively handicapped."

Among Chinese academics, that projection "is controversial," says Mary Young, a pediatrician and child development specialist formerly of the World Bank Institute in Washington, D.C. But although experts may debate the numbers, they are united on the enormity of the problem. "There is definitely a tremendous urban-rural gap" in educational achievement, says Young, who is leading pilot interventions for parents of young children in impoverished rural areas for the government-affiliated China Development Research Foundation in Beijing.

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A desolate classroom reflects the limited academic opportunities in China's depopulated rural villages.
RURAL EDUCATION ACTION PROGRAM


While China's dynamic urban population thrives, much of rural China is mired in poverty. More than 70 million people in the countryside live on less than $1 a day, according to the World Bank, and children have it particularly hard. On a recent visit to Shaanxi province, at a group of farmsteads isolated in a remote valley, a 27-year-old mother of two says that she would like to send her kids to preschool. But she would have to rent an apartment in town to do so—a prohibitive expense.

Many parents migrate to the booming cities for work, leaving children with grandparents. (China's household registration system requires that children enroll in schools in the district where their parents are registered.) Left-behind children tend to leave school early, eat poorly, and have little cognitive stimulation in the crucial first years of life. Grandparents, with limited education themselves, are poorly equipped to read to the next generation. They sometimes carry swaddled infants on their backs while working their fields, which delays infant motor development, Young says.

Such early deprivation, Rozelle and others say, limits kids' potential for success in life. "There is a massive convergence of evidence" that development in the first 1000 days after a baby's conception sets the stage for later educational achievement and adult health, says Linda Richter, a developmental psychologist at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, who doesn't work with Rozelle.

China's millions of at-risk children could threaten its future. Economic modeling shows that in some low- and middle-income countries, such as India and Tanzania, "the gross domestic product lost to stunting can be more than a country's spending on health," explains Richter, who helped produce a series of papers on early childhood development published online in The Lancet last October. Conversely, she says, "There is a special window of opportunity" for interventions that bolster health and improve parenting.

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Luo Lie, 5, does eye exercises at a rural school. Like many of his peers, he is being raised by grandparents.
KEVIN FRAYER/GETTY IMAGES


That's what Rozelle is setting out to prove—on an unprecedented scale. In 100 villages across Shaanxi, his team of Chinese and foreign collaborators is following 1200 baby-caregiver pairs; half attend the enriching early education centers and half serve as controls. If the intervention works, Rozelle says his team will seek to convince authorities to establish early education centers nationwide. "It will keep China from collapsing," he says.

Rozelle's earlier experiments on health interventions in China had "a real impact on the lives of poor people," says Howard White, a developmental economist with the Oslo-based Campbell Collaboration, which reviews economic and social studies. Rozelle's group, he says, has been "very successful testing things on a small scale, taking them up to the provincial level, and using the findings to influence national policy." Now, Rozelle hopes to have a similar impact with parenting.

Rozelle followed an unlikely path to becoming a crusader for China's infants. He started studying Mandarin in middle school because his father thought it would be a useful skill, and he pursued finance as an undergraduate at the University of California (UC), Berkeley. But he put his courses on hold to spend 3 years studying Chinese in Taiwan. Seeing the island's emergence as an Asian Tiger "got me excited about Asian development," he says.

Later, the poverty he observed backpacking through Southeast Asia and in South America, where he spent 2 years studying Spanish, instilled in him a concern about economic inequality. That led him to pursue a master's degree in development economics at Cornell University. Development economics was "a new, wide-open field," he says. And he had an advantage. "Not too many development economists speak Chinese."

Returning to Cornell for his Ph.D., he began a varied academic career in which China was the one constant. At Stanford and UC Davis, he explored such topics as irrigation investment, genetically modified cotton, and microcredit programs for rural poor. These efforts netted him a national Friendship Award, the highest honor given to foreigners for contributions to China, in 2008. He is also the longtime chairperson of an advisory board to the Chinese Academy of Sciences's (CAS's) Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy.

Rozelle's unorthodox path through academia is matched by his quirky sense of humor. At a recent public talk in English to a general audience in Shanghai, China, he mimed cradling an infant in his arms while he talked about rural parenting. He explained that studies show that investing in early childhood education pays off for society, whereas spending on adult education has negative returns. "You guys are done, sorry," he told the crowd.

In the mid-2000s, Rozelle and his colleagues shifted their focus from agriculture to education. China's economy was growing rapidly, but "children from rural areas with poor educations or in bad health didn't have the capabilities" to take advantage of new economic opportunities, says Luo Renfu, a longtime Rozelle collaborator and economist at Peking University in Beijing.

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In Anshun, China, Luo Hongni, 11 (left), and her brother Luo Gan, 10 (right), carry flowers to be used as animal feed.
KEVIN FRAYER/GETTY IMAGES


The result is a widening gap between urban and rural educational achievement in China, Rozelle says. Many urbanites fit the stereotype of "tiger" parents, pushing kids to excel in school. After hours, their schedules are packed with music and English lessons and sessions at cram schools, which prepare them for notoriously competitive university entrance exams. More than 90% of urban students finish high school.

But only one-quarter of China's children grow up in the relatively prosperous cities. Rural moms have high hopes for their children; Rozelle's surveys have found that 75% say they want their newborns to go to college, and 17% hope their child gets a Ph.D. The statistics belie those hopes: Just 24% of China's working population completes high school.

Rozelle believes such numbers bode ill for China's hopes of joining the ranks of high-income countries. Over the past 70 years, he explains, only 15 countries have managed to climb from middle- to high-income status, among them South Korea and Taiwan. In all those success stories, three-quarters or more of the working population had completed high school while the country was still in the middle-income bracket. These workforces "had the skills to support a high-income economy," Rozelle says. In contrast, in the 79 current middle-income countries, only a third or less of the workforce has finished high school. And China is at the bottom of the pack. School dropouts don't have the skills needed to thrive in a high-income economy, Rozelle says. And, worryingly, the factory jobs that now provide a decent living for those with minimal training are moving from China to lower-wage countries.

Rozelle thinks a lack of opportunity isn't the only factor holding back China's rural children. Physically and mentally, they are also at an increasing disadvantage, hampering their performance in school and their prospects in life.

Childhood in the other China
Compared with peers in the cities, rural kids have higher rates of malnutrition, uncorrected vision problems, and intestinal parasites. Many rural parents leave kids in the care of grandparents. The result, according to a team of economists: the intellectual stunting of roughly one-third of China's population.

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CREDITS: (GRAPHIC) G. GRULLÓN/SCIENCE; (DATA) SCOTT ROZELLE

In 2006, Rozelle gathered many of his research collaborators into a Rural Education Action Program (REAP). Based at Stanford, it has key partner institutions in China, including top schools, such as Peking University, and CAS's Center for Chinese Agricultural Policy in Beijing, which gives REAP credibility with national authorities. REAP also has connections with provincial universities and, through their professors, ties to local officials. (To avoid the scrutiny China gives nongovernmental organizations, Rozelle emphasizes that REAP is an academic entity conducting research.)

REAP's initial studies focused on the quality and cost of rural education. But Rozelle became aware of health issues during a 2009 visit to a rural school with Reynaldo Martorell, a maternal and child health and nutrition specialist at Emory University in Atlanta. "After lunch, all the kids were napping; Rey said they should be running around," Rozelle recalls. Martorell suspected malnutrition, and a preliminary survey proved him correct. Over several years, Rozelle's team conducted 19 surveys in 10 poor provinces covering 133,000 primary school kids. They found that 27% were anemic, an indication of malnutrition; 33% had intestinal worms; and 20% had uncorrected myopia. "If you've got one of these three things," Rozelle says, "you're not going to learn because you're sick."

REAP followed up with trial interventions. At 200 schools, they checked each child's vision and gave them a math test. Then, in half the schools, the kids who needed them got free glasses. A year later, the math scores of the kids with glasses had improved far more than those of peers in the other schools. Vitamin supplements and deworming yielded similar results. Luo says these and other findings helped convince the central government in 2011 to establish a school lunch program now benefiting 20 million rural students daily. "What impresses me about Scott," says Martorell, "is that his work does not end with just publications; he is deeply committed to making sure government officials become aware of the problems and solutions."

But Rozelle believed that he might achieve more by starting with younger children, persuaded by the work of economists showing that investment in the first 1000 days of life yields economic dividends. As he puts it: "The development economics field discovered babies in the past five or so years." Adversity early on—malnutrition or neglect of an infant's physical and emotional needs, for example—can leave cognitive deficits that persist for life. And in REAP, Rozelle had an organization that could do rigorous studies of interventions and their benefits.

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Fluent in Mandarin, Stanford University economist Scott Rozelle enjoys interacting with the rural children in his intervention programs.
RURAL EDUCATION ACTION PROGRAM


In 2013, REAP launched a study enrolling more than 1800 babies, ages 6 to 12 months, and their caregivers from 348 villages in impoverished Shaanxi province. A team took blood samples and measured the height and weight of each infant. An evaluator gave each baby a widely used test—the Bayley Scales of Infant and Toddler Development—that measures cognitive, language, and motor skills. Each caregiver answered a questionnaire used to assess the infant's social and emotional status. The tests were repeated three times at 6-month intervals. The team also tracked whether and when a mother had migrated away for work.

On the bright side, Rozelle says, the tests indicated rural kids "don't need help with their motor skills." But 49% of the babies were anemic. And 29% scored below normal on the Bayley test: nearly twice the 15% of babies that naturally fall at the low end of intelligence tests in any population.

The researchers initially focused on nutrition, providing vitamins in the trial's intervention arm. But follow-up tests showed that the supplements had marginal impact and that mental development scores deteriorated in both intervention and control groups.

At that point, Rozelle recalls, the team began to think, "Maybe it's a parenting problem." In spring 2014, REAP started asking caregivers in their study about parenting practices. Only 11% had told a story to their children the previous day, fewer than 5% had read to their children, and only a third reported playing with or singing to their children.

The situation is particularly fraught for "left-behind" children. Fully one-quarter of Chinese children under age 2 are left in the care of relatives at some point, according to UNICEF statistics. Grandparents often end up as the caretakers—and many "are still in a survival mode of thinking," without the time, energy, or education to read to their grandchildren, Young says. The test scores confirm a devastating impact: After mothers left home to work in another city, mental development scores among their children declined significantly and socio-emotional indices "fell apart," Rozelle says. The declines were greatest when a mother left during the child's first year.

REAP was already adapting what's known as the Jamaican intervention. Sally Grantham-McGregor, a physician and child development specialist, devised the strategy to help developmentally stunted children she observed while at the University of the West Indies in Kingston in the 1970s and 1980s. The Jamaican intervention relied on home visits to teach mothers, one-on-one, how to interact with their toddlers using books and toys designed to raise cognitive, language, and motor skills. The REAP team enlisted child education specialists and psychologists at Shaanxi Normal University in Xi'an, the province's capital, to translate and adapt the teaching materials. For coaches, REAP turned to China's National Health and Family Planning Commission, which was seeking new roles for its 1.5 million workers, who had enforced the country's now-ended one-child policy.

REAP then took 513 children-caregiver pairs from the 1800 participants and split them into intervention and control groups. For the next 6 months, the newly trained family planning workers visited intervention homes weekly for coaching using the Jamaican method. In the intervention group, when the mother was present the baby's Bayley scores rose to normal. But when a grandmother was raising the child, the Bayley score barely budged. "We're working hard to figure out why," Rozelle says.

The in-home visits were expensive, trainers sometimes skipped the most isolated families, and caretakers did not always comply. The coaching also did little to relieve the isolation of kids who did not have playmates, or of their mothers. A questionnaire given to mothers who remained at home with their children—often living with in-laws far from their own families and friends—suggested that 40% of them show signs of depression and could benefit from psychiatric help.

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At early childhood development centers, coaches work with caregivers to bolster such parenting skills as reading to children.
RURAL EDUCATION ACTION PROGRAM


Those findings set the stage for REAP's most ambitious experiment yet. To deliver services more cost-effectively, ensure that coaching sessions take place, and relieve isolation for toddlers and caregivers, the team over the past year set up 50 early childhood development centers in villages in Shaanxi province. The centers cost an average of $10,000 each to furnish and equip; their annual running costs range from $60,000 to $100,000. REAP raised the money from charitable foundations and philanthropists. The Shangluo facility, opened in May, is the first of several "supercenters" that will be located in apartment complexes being built in provincial towns to encourage rural residents to move off their isolated plots.

The REAP team will chart the progress of kids who visit the centers against children in 50 villages lacking them. Typical among those children is a 26-month-old girl being raised by her paternal grandparents in the village of Wanghe. Their house sits among a cluster of ramshackle buildings at the end of a dirt track. There are no playmates her age nearby. Her father works a 2-hour drive away in Xi'an, making it home only several times a year. Her mother has deserted the family. The grandmother, the main caregiver, did not even attend primary school. No toys or books are in sight. At an age when most kids have started forming two-word phrases, the girl barely talks. Not surprisingly, she scores dismally on the development test.

Rozelle says that when he sees kids in the randomly selected control villages, "I often want to take them in my arms and move them to the treatment village." But randomized trials are key to demonstrating the benefits of the intervention. Few countries have comparable programs providing all-around support for mothers and babies during a child's first 1000 days. Richter says there are a lot of unanswered questions about how to scale up interventions and adapt them to different cultures, how to support mothers at risk of depression, and how early interventions dovetail with later educational programs.

REAP's studies might provide some answers. The first assessment of the childhood education centers will be done in early 2018. "We hope to follow the kids for as long as we can find funding," says Wang Lei, a Shaanxi Normal University economist and a REAP affiliate. And Rozelle is already trying to convince the central government to set up centers in 300,000 villages across the country. Authorities could solve China's rural cognitive deficit problem, Rozelle says, "if they knew about it and put their minds to it."

The caregivers taking advantage of the centers are convinced of their value. At a center in Huangchuan, a village 30 kilometers north of Shangluo, Zhang Yanli says she has learned a lot about parenting and can see how quickly her 18-month-old daughter is picking up verbal and social skills. The young mother gestures to her older daughter, who is four-and-a-half years old. "I wish there had been a center for her."



One in three Chinese children faces an education apocalypse. An ambitious experiment hopes to save them | Science | AAAS

Quite an insightful article and wish China the best of luck on it. The experiences in this will be instrumental for other developing countries to learn from too.
 
Decline of China’s Engel's coefficient shows improvement in people’s livelihood
(People's Daily Online) 15:11, October 12, 2017

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China’s Engel's coefficient has been declining in the past five years, with the number standing at 30.1 percent in 2016, which is close to the wealthy life standard set by the UN.

According to statistics from the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS), the country’s Engel’s coefficient in 2016 stood at 30.1%, down by 2.9% over 2012, while the average disposable income of Chinese citizens increased by an annual average of 7.4% since 2012 to 23,821 RMB.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization uses the coefficient to describe how difficult it is for people to acquire the basic needs of life. A coefficient between 50 to 59 percent indicates that people can barely meet their daily needs, while a number below 30 percent represents a wealthy life.

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The decline of the coefficient has been hailed by many experts and media outlets, who believe that more disposable income can lead to the country’s consumption upgrade and diversified economy.

The People’s Daily on Oct. 12 published a commentary in which it noted that China’s Engel coefficient had lingered at 50 percent for a long time, while the current 30.1 percents shows that Chinese can now invest more on traveling, healthcare services, and entertainment. The improvement shows China’s remarkable achievement in income distribution and poverty alleviation.

The proportions of expenses on transportation and communication, education, culture and recreation, and health care and medical services to the consumption expenditure increased by 2.0%, 0.7%, and 1.3%, respectively, as compared with those in 2012, according to NBS.
 
他三年里为留守儿童建了73座书屋 | For left-behind children
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CGTN 2017-10-13 20:32:05
“我积存了3000多本书,如果把这些书送给孩子们看,那该多好呀 …”

With the acceleration of China's urbanization process, huge waves of people are leaving rural areas for the city, creating a special group of people: the left-behind children.

由于中国城镇化进程的加速,大批青壮年农村人口进城务工,催生了一个特殊的群体:留守儿童

Left-behind children refer to kids under the age of 16 whose parents work elsewhere, or are left with a single parent who don't have the ability to look after them. For various reasons, they either can't live a normal life with their parents or their parents can't bring them to the city where they work. These children are often left with their grandparents.

留守儿童,指父母双方外出务工,或一方外出务工另一方无监护能力,无法与父母正常共同生活的不满十六周岁的农村户籍未成年人。由于种种原因,他们的父母无法将他们带在身边。他们只能留在农村,和爷爷奶奶辈生活在一起。

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According to statistics from the Ministry of Civil Affairs, there were approximately nine million left-behind children in China in 2016. This is a huge group that urgently needs material help and psychological assistance from society.

据民政部统计,截至2016年,中国留守儿童的总数约为901万人。这是一个相当庞大的群体。他们在物质和精神方面,都亟待社会各界去扶助与关爱。

In Longhui County, in central Hunan Province, 80 percent of the population has migrated elsewhere for work, leaving children and the elderly behind.

在湖南省邵阳市隆回县就有这么一群孩子。这里80%的人都外出打工了,村里只剩下老人孩子。

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"The children have nothing to do after school. Sometimes their grandparents have to go about looking for them," said Ouyang Encheng, a retired teacher.

“他们放了学没有事情做,有的爷爷奶奶要到处找他们。” 欧阳恩城说。

Ouyang has taught for decades, starting his career in 1964. After retiring, he decided to continue his work helping those children.

欧阳恩城从1964年就开始当老师,做了几十年教育工作。退休之后,他决定为这些留守的孩子们做些什么。

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"I love books. I’ve collected more than 3,000 books," he said, "it would be great if I gave them to the children."

“我最喜欢的是书。我积存了3000多本书,”欧阳恩城说,“我想,如果我们把这些书送给孩子们看,那该多好呀。”

Ouyang’s wife sold their 150 kg pig for money. Together with the some 30,000 yuan Ouyang had saved for housing, they bought cabinets and bookshelves.

于是,欧阳恩城的爱人把家里三百多斤的猪卖了。他们用得来的钱,再加上欧阳恩城的三万元公积金,购置了一批柜子和书架,乡亲们都义务来帮忙。

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With the help of volunteers, they built 73 libraries in three years. The children can now read whenever and wherever they want.

在3年多的时间里,他们一共建了73座这样的书屋,让孩子们随时随地可以读书。

The rural libraries are popular among the children. "We spent the whole vacation here," said one of the children. Activities include reading and practicing calligraphy with Ouyang Encheng.

农家书屋很受孩子们欢迎。“我们整个假期都在这里。”有的孩子说。欧阳恩城和他们一起读书、练书法,充实了他们的生活。

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For Ouyang and the children, their hometown is beautiful, though it suffers from poverty. Their hope is that through reading, they can change the fate of the county and their own futures. "If the children were properly educated, they would gain unlimited strength," said Ouyang.

对欧阳恩城和孩子们而言,他们的家乡很美丽,但同时还很贫穷。他们都寄希望于读书来改变他们自己和这个地方的的命运:“如果孩子们可以把书读进去,就可以产生无穷无尽的力量。” 从丑小鸭到华罗庚,从地球到太空,这些书为孩子们打开了新的世界,让他们的心灵因梦想而充盈。也许,他们能从农家书屋起步,走出大山,走向更为光明的未来。

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Cameraman: Fang Zhijun
Film editor:
Wang Na, Xia Xiaojun
Story written by: Zhu Siqi
 
China to eradicate poverty by 2020
CGTN's Yang Jing
2017-10-17 13:40 GMT+8

With unprecedented achievements in poverty alleviation, China is a major contributor to global poverty reduction and has taken a step closer to making poverty history.

China’s achievements

After lifting more than 55.64 million people out of poverty between 2013 and 2016, China plans to help a further 10 million people this year, Liu Yongfu, director of the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation and Development, said at a press conference on October 10.

The country’s poverty incidence has been reduced from 10.2 percent in 2012 to 4.5 percent last year, according to official data.

China's achievement in poverty alleviation has been "one of the greatest stories in human history," Jim Yong Kim, President of the World Bank, told CGTN at the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting in Washington on October 13.

The world’s extreme poverty rate has been reduced from 40 percent in 1981 to 10.7 percent in 2013, and "most of the progress happened in China," he said.

According to the international standard set by the World Bank, anyone who lives on less than 1.90 US dollars per day is considered to be in extreme poverty.

In China, the living standards have been on a gradual rise as the economy develops.

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China currently sets its poverty standard at around 2.2 US dollars per capita each day, slightly higher than the international poverty line.

According to a document released by the State Council in 2015, extreme poverty will be eradicated in China by 2020 with no one living below the official poverty line.

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The document also stressed the strategy of tailor-made measures to target specific groups in poverty.

Specific measures include moving the poor households to more livable areas, developing local industries and businesses, offering job training and education support, Su Guoxia, spokesperson for the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation and Development, said in an interview in February.

Financial support and spending on poverty alleviation in China have jumped 35-fold in 30 years.

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China's institutional design has allowed increasing flexibility for innovative bottom-up processes that are instrumental in providing tailor-made solutions, Nicholas Rosellini, the United Nations Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative in China, said in an article on the UNDP’s website.

For example, many poor Chinese villages have seen a great deal of progress encouraged by local entrepreneurship, which is maximized out of proper policies and guidance, he said.

Jim Yong Kim said that the World Bank is working with companies, such as Alibaba, to seek ways to finance small and medium enterprises in Africa, following a similar pattern to Alibaba's activities in China.

China’s young generation is also paving its own way to reduce poverty through innovation.

One of the most well-known efforts is the non-profit organization, "Serve for China", founded in 2015 by Qin Yuefei, who served as a village chief in central China’s Hunan Province after graduating from Yale University.

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"Serve For China" members in a village. /"Serve For China" Photo

"Serve for China" aims to alleviate poverty by sending top Chinese graduates from around the world to Chinese villages where they can use their skills to promote rural development and social entrepreneurship.

Since September last year, the organization has started development and start-up projects in 15 villages and 12 co-ops have been established to promote local products, generating revenue for local people, media reports said.
 
Chinese farmers strike prosperous note with pipa
Source: Xinhua | 2017-11-21 10:15:30 | Editor: huaxia

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A pipa workshop in Lankao, central China's Henan Province (Xinhua/Li An)

By Xinhua writers Yuan Quan, Shi Linjing

For centuries, Chinese farmers have battled poverty with sickles and hoes. Now, they have a new tool: the pipa.

Xuchang Village, of Lankao County in central China's Henan Province, is known as "Pipa Village". It has abundant paulownia trees, an ideal raw material, and 54 workshops. Four in every five of the 628 villagers make the Chinese version of the lute and other traditional instruments.

They can make more than 50,000 pipa a year with sales exceeding 60 million yuan (9.05 million U.S. dollars). Some large factories export their instruments.

Frequent floods and sandstorms last century left the area with poor soil and crop failures, but in 1962, Jiao Yulu became Communist Party of China (CPC) secretary in Lankao and led the locals in planting trees to help soil and water conservation.

In the 1980s, when the trees were thriving, many villagers took up carpentry and sold furniture in the coastal cities.

When a professional instrument maker in Shanghai found that instruments made of paulownia sounded clear and melodious, locals began running workshops on the subject.

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A worker is making the pipa at a workshop in Lankao, central China's Henan Province (Xinhua/Li Bo)

"We used to sell paulownia as a decorating material, but half a square meter of the wood was only worth three or four yuan. If we crafted a pipa, it would fetch at least 400 yuan," says Dai Shiyong, who opened Lankao's first instrument factory in 1988.

Dai was successful and others followed, despite some early complaints that the instruments were poor quality.

Xu Huiping left home to become a factory worker in the big cities, but by the 1990s, he was earning just 40 yuan a month at a pipa factory in Kaifeng city, about 60 km from Lankao. He could barely support his two children and his handicapped wife, and the family was one of the most impoverished in the village. But Xu worked hard and mastered the process of making a pipa after a decade.

In 2008, he returned and opened a small workshop. Initially, he made fewer than 20 pipa a year. Most sold for more than 1,000 yuan, but they could range up to tens of thousands of yuan.

Xu is very happy in his work: "I work at home. I have more time to take care of my family."

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Xu Huiping and his wife at work (Xinhua/Miao Yucai)

This year, Xu bought two machines with a loan supported by the local government. He has received more orders and produced more than 3,000 pipa.

"I am speeding up, so I can complete all the orders."

Instrument-making has lifted 102 people in Xuchang village out of poverty and three families have opened workshops like Xu.

"The annual income of the poorest people has surged from 1,400 yuan in 2014 to 3,500 yuan," says Xu Shunhai, the village Party chief.

In 2014, Xi Jinping, General Secretary of the CPC Central Committee, visited Lankao twice as part of a campaign to pair top Party officials with poor areas.

That year, about 11.8 percent of Lankao's population lived in poverty. County authorities made a commitment to cast off poverty in three years and achieve moderate prosperity in seven years.

XxjwnmE005001_20171121_BNMFN0A004_11n.jpg
Xu Huiping's pipa workshop (Xinhua/Xu Hongxing)

In March this year, Lankao withdrew from the national list of impoverished counties. Its poverty ratio is down to 1.27 percent. About 7,000 residents now run instrument-making workshops or factories, employing 65,000 people.

Xu Huiping's favorite pieces are two pipa that he gave to his daughter, Xu Siqian, on her 7th and 18th birthdays. He carved his name and poems on the soundboards, which were made of premium materials. Each could have sold 50,000 yuan.

"But they are priceless," says Xu, with a humble smile.

Xu Siqian, 20, started college last year and majors in music. She plays the pipa at home on breaks, drawing cheers and applause from the neighbors and making her father proud.

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Many children across the country go to pipa lessons (Xinhua/He Wuchang)

The industry has promoted music study. At weekends, parents busily send their children to music classes and almost every primary school now offers the national music curriculum.

Lankao is planning a "music village" where professionals from across the country can hold concerts.

Xu Siqian wants to teach children in her village how to play the pipa after she graduates: "I hope one day all the villagers can not only make pipa, but also play and enjoy its beautiful music."
 
Alibaba to invest 10 bln yuan in poverty elimination project
China Plus Published: 2017-12-01 17:55:20

Alibaba's executive chairman Jack Ma announced that his company will invest 10 billion yuan (1.5 billion USD) in a poverty elimination project, aiming to help poverty-stricken rural residents to shake off poverty.

The relief fund will be chaired by Ma and will take on specific projects.

e411def3-3420-40de-8c4d-2576d811e11f.jpg
Alibaba's founder and executive chairman Jack Ma speaks at the launch ceremony of its poverty relief fund on December 1, 2017. [Photo: China Plus]

Four of the company's vice chairmen will be involved with each focusing on education, empowering women, entrepreneurship, and environmental protection respectively.

Alibaba's subsidiary companies will also sponsor poverty alleviation projects, Ma said.

He said Alibaba will publish poverty relief reports every year and invite 30 observers to supervise the project.

f047b3c3-8034-47ab-8c6f-b775b6f23fd7.jpg
Alibaba's founder and executive chairman Jack Ma speaks at the launch ceremony of its poverty relief fund on December 1, 2017. [Photo: China Plus]

It is not the company's first effort in such area. Since the early days of the company, Alibaba has been advocating a culture that encourages its employees to engage in undertakings with social significance. For example, the leadership has funded scholarships for the training of professional school teachers in China's rural areas. Other existing initiatives have been focusing on female empowerment which has so far helped more than 5,000 mothers set-up businesses of their own.

bf49b1f9-f45d-4e0e-9704-3335e1821ff3.jpg
Alibaba launches a poverty relief fund on December 1, 2017. [Photo: China Plus]
 
Alibaba to invest 10 bln yuan in poverty elimination project
China Plus Published: 2017-12-01 17:55:20

Alibaba's executive chairman Jack Ma announced that his company will invest 10 billion yuan (1.5 billion USD) in a poverty elimination project, aiming to help poverty-stricken rural residents to shake off poverty.

The relief fund will be chaired by Ma and will take on specific projects.

e411def3-3420-40de-8c4d-2576d811e11f.jpg
Alibaba's founder and executive chairman Jack Ma speaks at the launch ceremony of its poverty relief fund on December 1, 2017. [Photo: China Plus]

Four of the company's vice chairmen will be involved with each focusing on education, empowering women, entrepreneurship, and environmental protection respectively.

Alibaba's subsidiary companies will also sponsor poverty alleviation projects, Ma said.

He said Alibaba will publish poverty relief reports every year and invite 30 observers to supervise the project.

f047b3c3-8034-47ab-8c6f-b775b6f23fd7.jpg
Alibaba's founder and executive chairman Jack Ma speaks at the launch ceremony of its poverty relief fund on December 1, 2017. [Photo: China Plus]

It is not the company's first effort in such area. Since the early days of the company, Alibaba has been advocating a culture that encourages its employees to engage in undertakings with social significance. For example, the leadership has funded scholarships for the training of professional school teachers in China's rural areas. Other existing initiatives have been focusing on female empowerment which has so far helped more than 5,000 mothers set-up businesses of their own.

bf49b1f9-f45d-4e0e-9704-3335e1821ff3.jpg
Alibaba launches a poverty relief fund on December 1, 2017. [Photo: China Plus]
Have you heard CEO of JD.com was appointed as the village head?
 

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