Spending on education is expected to take up a record 4 percent
of China's gross domestic product (GDP) during the coming five
years, a cabinet official said yesterday.
In addition to increasing funds to guarantee compulsory
education, the country will lay stress on vocational training for
its massive rural migrant labour, Minister of Education Zhou Ji
told a briefing held by the State Council Information Office in
Beijing.
"Indeed, China's current expenditure on education, at 2.79 per
cent of GDP, is not very high," Zhou said. "From this year on, the
ratio of education spending will edge up steadily and
appreciably."
While the budget is yet to be endorsed by the National People's
Congress, which convenes for its annual session on Sunday, the
government has proposed to apportion at least 218.2 billion yuan
(US$26.94 billion) in the 2006-10 period to ensure every child in
rural areas can enjoy nine years of compulsory education, Zhou
said.
China implemented the Compulsory Education Law 20 years ago.
Last year, primary school attendance hit 99.15 per cent, while the
gross enrolment for junior high schools stood at 95 per cent, an
increase of 6 percentage points from 2000, the ministry's
statistics show.
But largely because of poverty, the drop-out rate among students
under compulsory education was as high as 5 per cent in the rural
areas of seven provinces in central and western China in 2004,
compared with nearly zero in large- and medium-sized cities,
according to ministry sources.
To redress the disparity, the central authorities have decided
to scrap tuition and other fees for primary and junior high school
students in western provinces from the spring semester. The
exemption will be extended to central and eastern provinces by
2007, Zhou said.
To further narrow the educational gap between rural and urban
areas, a key solution is to improve the quality of teachers in the
countryside, the minister said.
Aside from giving incentives such as higher pay, the Compulsory
Education Law, which is being revised, is expected to make it
mandatory for urban teachers to teach for some time in rural areas
before they can be promoted, Zhou said.
The minister said China's future economic development hinges on
the improvement of skills and quality of its workforce.
"China has a huge population of 1.3 billion, which will be a
heavy burden (to economic growth) if this population is poorly
qualified; but if highly qualified, the population will deliver a
tremendous human-resources advantage," Zhou said.
Vocational education for rural migrant workers will be a
priority, as they have already become the main force driving the
growth of a host of industries in China, he said.
Already 140 million farmers have migrated to urban areas to seek
their fortunes, and another 100 million are on the waiting list,
according to Zhou.
The ministries of agriculture, labour and finance are launching
several national projects to help train the one-time farmers.
They include a training programme for workers urgently needed
for modern industry and the services sector, plus a project
specially designed to train farmers before and after they move to
work in cities, the minister said.
Other highlights of the press conference:
A campaign launched by the government to curb unreasonable
school charges, which are rampant in parts of the country, has
resulted in the dismissal of 794 school masters since 2003;
China had 23 million students in its institutions of higher
learning by the end of 2005, the year graduates numbered a record
high of 3.38 million;
By 2004, citizens aged 15 and above had received 8.3 years of
schooling on average;
The number of people learning Chinese in other countries and
regions has exceeded 30 million.
(China Daily March 1, 2006)