China will adopt more favorable policies and invest more money
in the rural areas this year, said sources with the Chinese Ministry of
Finance recently.
An official with the ministry said rural construction will claim
a higher share of China's financial budgets in 2006, with more
money to be spent on the improvement of living conditions in the
countryside.
According to the ministry, the Chinese government will provide
an additional grain fund of 1 billion yuan (US$124 million) for the
country's 13 major agricultural provinces in 2006.
The government will shift the focus of infrastructure
construction from the urban areas to the rural areas this year,
with a number of key agricultural projects set to be
established.
China has greatly increased its investment in farmers,
agriculture and the countryside in recent years. It was estimated
that in 2005, the central finance allocated over 300 billion yuan
(US$37.5 billion) to support rural development, a 50-percent rise
from the 2002 figure.
In addition to direct financial support, China has announced the
abolition of agricultural tax as of Jan. 1, 2006, which totals 22
billion yuan (US$2.75 billion) every year.
Though government investment is on the up, farmers are still in
an inferior position in terms of education and social security
compared with urban residents.
Government statistics show that rural residents, who account for
some 60 percent of the nation's total population, only have access
to 20 percent of the country's medical resources.
To change this, the ministry plans to further promote the reform
of health care services in the rural areas in 2006 by establishing
a new medical system.
The ministry will also adopt follow-up measures to push forward
the development of rural public sanitation, education, science and
technology and culture for the building of a new socialist
countryside in China.
(Xinhua News Agency February 6, 2006)