China eyes narrowing rural-urban wealth gap (Reuters) Updated: 2006-03-02 12:36
The annual meeting of China's parliament opens on Sunday with the government
expected to push through steps it hopes will narrow the wealth and development
gap between its cities and vast countryside.
Taiwan will also spring
into the spotlight after its "president" Chen Shui-bian scrapped a council on
unification with the mainland, prompting a strong rebuke from
Beijing.
But it is efforts to build a "new socialist countryside"
that may generate the most debate at this National People's Congress (NPC)
session and be the focus of a government increasingly concerned about rural
stability on issues ranging from corruption to land seizures. China is
worried that stark gaps in income, health care and schooling between rich urban
dwellers and the three-quarters of its 1.3 billion people who live in the
countryside could lead to further resentment. The government is to
unveil and formalise a raft of measures to better protect farmers from forced
land seizures and boost spending on rural health care and schools.
Last
year there was a gap of almost $1,000 in average annual income between city
dwellers and the 750 million people who live on the land, who earned an average
of $400.
According to an Internet survey by the People's Daily Web site
(www.people.com.cn), narrowing the wealth gap and cracking down on corruption
were two of the most important topics people were paying attention to at this
parliamentary session. This year alone, central and provincial
governments will give 103 billion yuan ($12.8 billion) to local governments to
make up a revenue shortfall after abolition of agricultural tax in 2005.
China aims to raise spending on education from 2.7 percent to 4 percent
of GDP as the world's most populous nation focuses on improving rural schooling
to stem a gap with rich coastal areas.
China has nine years of
compulsory education, but fees levied by cash-strapped local governments in poor
areas put primary education beyond the means of many rural families.
How
the NPC responds to Chen Shui-bian's scrapping of Taiwan's "National
Unification Council" and 15-year-old unification guidelines will be another
focus area. China's most urgent task is to prevent Chen pushing for
de jure independence through constitutional amendments, the Communist Party's
Central Office for Taiwan Affairs and the cabinet's Taiwan Affairs Office said
this week in a joint statement.
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