As legislators sit down in Beijing this week to discuss China's future, far
away in Shanxi Province miners will be doing what they do every day trooping
underground to scrabble for coal in some of the world's most dangerous
collieries.
The streets around the Great Hall of the People may be clogged with luxury
cars, but the average wage in China today is still only 13,935 yuan ($1,798) per
year a fraction of the cost of an Audi A8.
The past 25 years have seen tall office buildings, fancy supermarkets,
airports and expressways spring up around the nation. They have also seen
average wages increase from less than 500 yuan ($64.10) a year to the present
level.
But some people have benefited more than others and the rapidly growing
wealth of the best off in society raises the spectre of hard times for poorer
people, whose wages have not kept pace.
Prices are already increasing beyond the reach of many - the cost of
healthcare has risen so high that a serious illness would bankrupt many
families.
Social inequality fuels crime and poses a threat to the nation's stability if
it is not brought under control.
When Deng Xiaoping initiated the economic reforms that have made China the
nation it is today, he said, "Some must get rich first".
Now "some" are rich and it is time to help the rest of the nation catch up.
Streamlining tax bands so foreign-invested companies no longer get an easy
ride is a good first step, as are tackling corruption and improving education in
poor rural areas.
But it is not enough.
Too often in China reforms are not put into action by local governments. This
has to change.
Meanwhile more investment in the future better schools, hospitals and social
services for the nation's most vulnerable people - should be a priority.
(China Daily 03/05/2007 page3)