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Rising prices eating into farmers' income
By Fu Jing and Wang Lan (China Daily)
Updated: 2008-07-25 08:49

A dozen Big Macs - that is what a Chinese farmer will be able to buy with his earnings from one mu (0.066 hectares) of wheat this summer.

It is also about four burgers less than what he could afford last year.

Farming one mu of wheat will yield 153 yuan ($22) of net income this summer, a recent official survey on farmers' income has showed.

Rising production costs was cited as a major reason behind the decrease in income.


A farmer sieves grain in Haikou, Hainan province, early this month. While the country enjoys a bumper harvest this year, farmers' incomes have decreased with rising fuel and fertilizer costs. [China Daily]

"In spite of growing government subsidies in agriculture, we should be alarmed that it's increasingly hard for farmers to grow their income amid rising costs," the country's top legislative body, the National People's Congress (NPC), said in a recent bundle of suggestions to the central government.

The NPC's suggestions were followed by an announcement from the National Bureau of Statistics yesterday, which said that farmers' per capita income hit 2,528 yuan for the first half of the year, an increase of 10.3 percent over the same period last year, after adjusting for inflation.

About one-third of the farmers' income is also reportedly earned from their stints as migrant workers in factories, mines and construction sites, while the sale of farm produce was said to have helped them earn 1,080 yuan each, up 22.1 percent year-on-year.

But the pace had slowed by three percentage points, when compared with the growth rate of 13.3 percent in the first half of last year. The decrease is considered a wide fluctuation since 2004, when the growth rate of farmers' income started to accelerate after years of less than 5 percent annual growth.

Similarly, thinner profit margins have forced the farmers to downsize their planting acreage.

Li Taiai, a 58-year-old farmer in Zhongcaiwan village of Shandong province, said the land for growing grain in his village has shrunk by one-third in the past five years.

"More and more grain growers are shifting to planting vegetables, which can generate much higher profit in a shorter time," Li said. Just a few years ago, half of the land was used to grow wheat and other grain, he said.

For instance, the yield from a mix of cucumber, tomato and radish per mu can amount to 5,000 to 6,000 yuan each season, which is more than 10 times that of wheat.

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