Record funding to ensure grain safety

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-03-08 09:42

China's record amount of agricultural funding this year will help ensure grain safety and increase farmers' income, but challenges to redress the rural-urban income gap remain, researchers say.

Premier Wen Jiabao said in his government work report to the ongoing annual session of the National People's Congress (NPC) that the central government will spend 562. 5 billion yuan (US$79.2 billion) on agriculture sector this year, nearly doubling the 2004 figure.

Related readings:
 Official denies grain 'reserve crisis'
 Increasing soybean imports trigger off worries
 China raises minimum price for wheat, rice
 Grain, edible oil supplies to be ensured ahead of festival
"The number is a rather big increment in recent years, demonstrating the strong commitment of the government to fortifying the foundation of agriculture," said Bing Zhigang, finance director of northeastern Liaoning Province and a delegate to the NPC.

The promised investment, which was 130.7 billion yuan more than last year, was aimed to ensure grain safety and at the same time, boost farmers' income, according the report.

Ke Bingsheng, a China Agriculture University professor, said the pledge to boost production of grain, edible oil and meat and grain export control would help stabilize domestic prices and prevent fluctuations of global market prices.

Meanwhile, it aimed to correct the big gap between cities and the countryside, he said.

China's No. 1 document, promulgated on January 30 by the central committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the State Council, the country's Cabinet, was centered on combating rural problems that affected a population of 900 million. This was the fifth consecutive year in which the No. 1 central document focused on agriculture.

Under such guidance, an annual financial budget planned a 23.4 percent increase in direct subsidies to farmers, and doubling education, culture and health expenses in the countryside.

Han Jun, head of the rural department of the Development Research Center of the State Council, said the promised investment sent a positive message and will have a substantial effect in agriculture. However, it was still not much compared to the growth pace of the total government revenues.

"The investment in agriculture still needs to grow on a steady basis in the future," he added.

A major chasm exists between the income of rural and urban people. According to National Bureau of Statistics data, per-capita disposable income was 13,786 yuan in urban areas last year, up 12.2 percent in real terms, while per-capita income was 4,140 yuan in rural areas, up a real 9.5 percent.

Although farm produce sold at higher prices last year, with grain prices up 5.7 percent and cooking oil increasing 37.1 percent, farmers complained the benefits were eroded by rising production costs.

"Grains are selling at a better price, but costs in fertilizers, pesticides, gasoline and agri-machinery rose at a faster pace. That nearly offset a large portion of the benefits obtained from canceling agri-tax, subsidies and a bumper harvest," said a Wang Fuchen, a Hebei Province farmer.

"I earned 120 yuan more per mu (0.06 hectares) of wheat from subsidy and price increases, but it cost nearly that much in buying fertilizers, gasoline to pump water and hiring hands to plant and harvest," he said.

"We could only keep the money in our pockets when prices for the production costs are kept down," he said.


(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)