South China's Guangdong Province, one of the nation's economic powerhouses,
has been urged to put more effort into increasing the per capita income of rural
and urban residents.
Last year, the urban per capita income of Guangdong
was 16,016 yuan ($2,053), an increase of 8.4 percent compared with the previous
year, according to the Guangdong Provincial Statistics Bureau.
However,
Guangdong's rate of increase was lower than the nation's average, which stood at
12.1 percent last year.
The rate was also lower than that of Jiangsu, Shandong and Zhejiang, three other economic powerhouses in East China,
which hit 14.3 percent, 13.5 percent and 12.1 percent, respectively, according
to a recent study by the Guangdong Provincial Situation Research and Survey
Centre.
The study also showed the rate of increase of Guangdong's per
capita income in rural areas, 5,080 yuan ($651) last year, was only 8.3
percent.
It was lower than that of the three eastern provinces, and the
nation's average of 10.2 percent.
"It is now a crucial time for the
southern province to attach more importance to increasing rural and urban
residents' income," Zhang Changsheng, a leading researcher with the center, told
China Daily yesterday.
The researcher attributed Guangdong's lower per
capita income to the provincial government's "relatively unbalanced" strategy in
economic development in recent years.
According to the study, Guangdong's
GDP last year was higher than the other three provinces, more
than 2,596 billion yuan ($332.8 billion).
In addition, the southern
province's export and import volume totalled $527.2 billion last year, which was
also the highest among the four economic powerhouses.
"According to the
government's economic and social development planning, Guangdong in recent years
has given too much importance to industrial development, but has not outlined
its strategy on how to improve the income of rural and urban residents," Zhang
said.
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