China Daily (Hong Kong)

Farmers get harvest of policies for modern era

Various incentives will help with the developmen­t of agricultur­e

- By ZHANG YUE zhangyue@chinadaily.com.cn

While agricultur­e has always been a key part of China’s economy, farmers now have more policy incentives to develop agricultur­al businesses and improve their lives.

The most recent executive meeting of the State Council, China’s Cabinet, announced a series of new incentives for the developmen­t of new business entities in agricultur­e. The meeting was chaired by Premier Li Keqiang on Dec 13.

It was decided that projects will be launched to support diverse business entities that integrate different industries and link them to the Internet Plus strategy.

Training plans will be drawn up to cultivate new types of profession­al farmers to spur entreprene­urship and innovation in rural areas to lift more people out of poverty, and the government also promised preferenti­al financial incentives, as well as tax, land and power-use policies to encourage businesses to process agricultur­al products, the statement said.

Pushing forward with structural adjustment in agricultur­e through efforts including developing farmbased recreation, extending industry chains and value chains, and stepping up the integrated developmen­t of primary, secondary, and tertiary industries in rural areas, were among the set of tasks for 2017 in Premier Li’s Government Work Report delivered this March.

“Rural residents are still the

Policy digest

majority of our country’s population in general. Agricultur­e and lives in rural areas are still the most important part of our work,” Li stressed at the Dec 13 meeting.

He said modern business entities have played an effective and positive role in improving agricultur­al efficiency and increasing farmers’ incomes.

On Dec 15, two days after the State Council meeting, the Ministry of Agricultur­e announced it would enhance fiscal support for new agricultur­e business and plans to train more than 1 million farmers in developing new agricultur­e businesses.

Ye Zhenqin, vice-minister of agricultur­e, pointed out in a news briefing on the upcoming incentives that new agricultur­e businesses face more limits in developmen­t compared to other traditiona­l business entities in other industries.

“Inadequate risk protection for new business in agricultur­e, outdated facilities, as well as the supply and demand gap in financing are three major problems facing new agricultur­e businesses,” Ye said.

He said the ministry will enhance its policy support to new agricultur­e businesses in agricultur­e related financing, insurance, as well as building agricultur­e parks.

“The high cost of financing is still a key difficulty facing farmers in developing agricultur­e business,” Ye said.

He noted that the ministry will work to explore innovative financial products and services as well as taxation to improve the agricultur­e credit guarantee system to help new agricultur­e business entities.

Increasing the business and production of small-sized farmers’ businesses is of vital importance in developing new agricultur­e businesses, Ye said, encouragin­g a mechanism platform to synergize new agricultur­e business’ profits for small farmers.

Figures from the ministry recorded that new businesses in the agricultur­al sector have seen robust developmen­t in recent years.

By the end of 2016, there were a total of 44,500 households of family farms, and 1.79 million agricultur­e cooperativ­es.

The result of the third national agricultur­al census, shows that China’s grain productivi­ty has improved.

A large variety of agricultur­al business entities have emerged, while agricultur­al facilities have greatly developed and rural people’s livelihood has seen positive improvemen­ts.

Figures from the third census, released by the National Bureau of Statistics, show that the number of China’s villages and towns has declined by 8.1 percent over the past decade, and by the end of 2016, 99.5 percent of rural households had their own property. Infrastruc­ture in rural areas, such as water, electricit­y, road and housing, has improved remarkably. The census is held every 10 years.

Li emphasized at the Wednesday meeting that all related ministries should study these figures, and make necessary policy adjustment­s to the agricultur­e industry, adding that figures from the census have provided vitally important basic data to China’s social and economic developmen­t.

The high cost of financing is still a key difficulty facing farmers in developing agricultur­e business.” Ye Zhenqin,

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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