Full Text: Report on China's central and local budgets

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-03-19 09:17

Second, we supported the development of education. Government spending on education in 2006 totaled 475.27 billion yuan, up 19.6% compared to the figure for 2005, representing 103.8% of the budgeted figure. The central government's contribution to this amount was 53.6 billion yuan, a year-on-year rise of 39.4%. In addition to giving priority to rural compulsory education, we also launched an initiative to build national vocational colleges as a showcase for vocational higher education and to support the efforts to build hands-on training centers for these colleges. We continued to support the implementation of the May 1998 Project to improve the quality of education in universities. We improved the system of financial assistance policies consisting of government student loans, grants and scholarships as the main forms of aid for students of colleges and secondary vocational schools from financially strapped families to help them complete their education.

Third, we supported the development of public health. Budget allocations from governments at all levels for medical care and public health in 2006 reached 131.158 billion yuan, a year-on-year increase of 26.5%, or 110.7% of the budgeted figure. Of this amount, 13.8 billion yuan was from the central budget, up 65.4%. The increased spending was mainly used to finance public health programs such as prevention and control of major communicable and endemic diseases like AIDS, tuberculosis and snail fever, to help pay the medical bills of poor women having babies in hospital, to equip and staff community health centers and rural health clinics and to fund the placement of a large number of doctors to rural areas to help develop local healthcare systems.

Fourth, we supported innovation in science and technology. In2006 we set up a system for ensuring stable growth of government funding for science and technology, and central and local governments spent 126.038 billion yuan on science and technology, a year-on-year rise of 26.2%, or 110.2% of the budgeted figure. Of this amount, allocations from the central budget totaled 77.4 billion yuan, up 29.2%. We further improved the structure of this funding by increasing spending on basic research, on applied research, and for nonprofit research institutes. We encouraged independent innovation in enterprises by creating a system of incentives and by adopting preferential fiscal and tax policies toward innovative enterprises such as granting tax breaks and awarding government procurement contracts.

Fifth, we supported the development of public cultural programs as well as the culture industry. Expenditures of governments at all levels on culture, sports and radio in 2006 amounted to 83.453 billion yuan, 18.6% more than the previous year, or 108.5% of the budgeted figure. Of this amount, allocations from the central government totaled 12.3 billion yuan, up 23.9%. These expenditures were mainly used to proceed with the reform of the cultural management system and also improve the system of public cultural services. The focus of this spending was on funding efforts to extend radio and TV coverage to every village, to bring digital film projection to the countryside, to share cultural information across the country, to reward and assist some rural families that observe the family planning policy and to carry out the "fewer children equals faster prosperity" project in the western region.

Sixth, we supported ecological improvement and environmental protection. We improved the policy on the virgin forest protection program. We adjusted the follow-up policies on returning cultivated land to forests and improved the system to fund ecological conservation in forests. We supported the pilot reform of the management system of state forestry farms and the ownership system of state forests. Government funds were allocated to fund efforts to reforest 266,667 hectares of farmland and return 10 million hectares of grazing land to grassland in 2006. We pressed ahead with a reform to introduce a system of royalties paid to the government by coalmining companies. This pilot reform has been carried out throughout eight provincial-level localities, beginning in 2006. These measures indicate that China's social undertakings are in a new period of rapid development.
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