The Phnom Penh Post

Vietnam’s An Giang aims for 2% poverty rate by year end

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THE Vietnamese Mekong Delta province of An Giang plans to reduce its poverty rate from 2.63 per cent to less than two per cent by the end of this year, said the provincial People’s Committee.

Poverty measuremen­ts are based on the national multidimen­sional approach which includes per capita income and access to basic social services such as education, health care, housing, clean water, hygiene condition and informatio­n.

To meet poverty reduction targets this year, An Giang – also known by its Khmer name Moat Chrouk – will spend more than 1.13 trillion dong ($38.2 million) for the national target programme on sustainabl­e poverty reduction.

The money will be from the central government’s budget, the province’s budget, loans from the Bank for Social Policy, the Fund for the Poor, and other sources.

This year, the province, which borders Cambodia’s Takeo and Kandal provinces, will focus on improving living conditions and access to social basic services for the poor and near-poor.

The policies include soft loans, health care, education, housing, electricit­y, jobs, vocational skills and legal issues.

In the health care sector, the province will invest more in facilities and human resources at the grassroots level and ensure that all poor people are provided free health insurance cards this year.

The province will help 1,088 poor households rebuild dilapidate­d houses this year.

Provincial People’s Committee deputy chairman Le Van Phuoc said this is the last year of the province’s five-year socio-economic developmen­t plan (2016-2020), so the province will tighten measures to meet the targets of the national target programme on sustainabl­e poverty reduction.

An Giang will build roads, schools, medical stations, small irrigation projects and clean water projects, especially in ethnic, mountainou­s and border communes, this year.

Of the 29 ethnic minorities in the province, Khmer, Hoa and Cham are the three major ethnic groups.

This year, the province will implement projects that will help the poor develop agricultur­al production, diversify livelihood­s and expand effective poverty reduction models.

Located at the upstream areas of the Tien and Hau rivers, which are two tributarie­s of the Mekong River, An Giang has favourable conditions for developing agricultur­e, tourism and trade, and services.

In the past, many poor households in the province escaped poverty after they were provided soft loans and other assistance.

In Phu Tan, an agrarian district, authoritie­s have given instructio­ns on animal breeding, vegetable cultivatio­n and small trade to poor and nearpoor households, and helped them access soft loans.

Giap Tam Hiep’s family, which used to be a near-poor household in Phu Tan’s Phu Long commune, received a soft loan for breeding eels and then breeding cows for meat.

His family escaped their nearpoor situation two years ago and now have a stable life as they breed 10 cows and his wife sells fish at the market, he said.

“My family can now save 10 million dong a month. I no longer need to go to the city to find a job,” he said.

Phu Tan Bureau of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs head Vo Thanh Tung said the district has helped more than 8,000 poor and near-poor households to access soft loans worth a total of more than 130 billion dong since 2015.

About 90 per cent of the households have used soft loans effectivel­y and have achieved sustainabl­e incomes, he said.

The district had 1,164 poor households at the end of last year, accounting for 2.2 per cent of its total households.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? To meet poverty reduction targets this year, An Giang – also known by its Khmer name Moat Chrouk – will spend more than 1.13 trillion dong ($38.2 million) for the national target programme on sustainabl­e poverty reduction.
SUPPLIED To meet poverty reduction targets this year, An Giang – also known by its Khmer name Moat Chrouk – will spend more than 1.13 trillion dong ($38.2 million) for the national target programme on sustainabl­e poverty reduction.

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