A small good thing is not a big good thing at least not yet.
While all in China welcomed the central government decision to
discontinue the 2,600-year-old agricultural tax, some press
commentators might have made a mistake by exaggerating its
significance.
Abolishing the tax is only a start for this rapidly
industrializing economy to relieve pressure on its farm sector,
which lags behind in development. But it obviously needs to take
far more innovative moves to address the problems accumulated
there.
Those commentators went too far indeed by lauding the move,
which affects just less than 0.01 percent of Chinese GDP, as the
economy's "paying back" and "nourishing" of its struggling farmers,
and even as a shining example of some vaguely defined "political
civilization."
In fact, a couple of years ago, the share of agricultural tax in
China's government revenue already declined from more than 40 per
cent in the 1950s to less than 1 per cent, thanks to the
unprecedented growth in industry and commerce.
In 2004, Chinese farmers paid 23.2 billion yuan (US$2.86
billion) in agricultural tax, when the size of the whole economy,
in terms of GDP, was more than 13.6 trillion yuan (US$1.7
trillion), and later (in December 2005) revised to around 16
trillion yuan (close to US$2 trillion).
Not only did farming remain one of the worst paid jobs in
society, farmers were receiving the least support (and in many
cases none) in medical care, and in education. Just to slightly
balance the ugly disparity, already 28 provinces scratched the tax
in 2005. And for the whole year, only 1.5 billion yuan (US$185
million) was collected across the nation under that revenue
category.
So, as a government revenue, agricultural tax was only of a
nominal significance when the national legislature passed the
motion to discard it altogether. But the real significance of the
move, instead of any major support to the farm sector, is rather
that the urban economy has grown so large that the little amount of
finance it can squeeze from rural society has become
dispensable.
Taking nothing from a poor man does not mean giving him an
opportunity, let alone a free opportunity to achieve a decent life.
In this regard, what China has done is far from enough.
There are many things that the government can immediately start
doing without spending a penny just by putting an end to some old
practices that make those opportunities hard to come by.
For instance, the discriminatory rules on rural-urban migration
should be all lifted. They are against the very principle of the
rule of law in the first place. The key is to make it easy for
rural migrants to look for jobs (whatever jobs), and to enjoy equal
legal support when they claim rights, own properties and take
lawsuits in places other than their hometowns.
Schools and medical clinics, especially privately-owned ones,
shouldn't be allowed to charge any surcharges from their rich
customers without rendering free admission and services to rural
migrants and their children, at least to a certain percentage.
The same rule can be applied to employers of all trades.
Services that are filled with low-skilled migrant workers also
deserve tax incentives, so long as they follow labour rules and pay
their workers decently.
All cities must submit their annual settlement programmes for
new migrants to have their urban development plans approved by the
higher authorities.
Every five years (when a new five-year plan is launched), there
should be new cities especially designed for generating jobs for
rural migrants. Showcase programmes of this sort should be seen
near Beijing and Shanghai, and in the Pearl River Delta to serve as
national examples.
In the meantime, pilot schemes should be started for farmers to
form joint-stock companies to develop and own local public
infrastructure and logistic services with a public demand, such as
the supply chain of crop seeds and animal feeds. Public auditing
should be strict, to prevent local cadres from interfering with
their business operations.
Finally, the government's existing accounting method should be
revamped. The farm sector should not be seen just as a cost centre,
or a unit that constantly requires "paying back" or "nourishing" in
the official accounting book.
With half of the nation's labour force still tied to it, the
farm sector is an untapped resource, and a huge one. Just think how
much in GDP, and how much more service (and thus convenience in the
daily life of the People's Republic of China) can be created just
by organizing all these men and women in a different way.
(China Daily January 9, 2006)