China Daily

Year-end evaluation­s get underway

- By LI LEI lilei@chinadaily.com.cn

Data on poverty relapse rates and impoverish­ed households’ income stability will figure in evaluation­s of provincial districts’ poverty alleviatio­n efforts in 2017, according to a senior official from the State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviatio­n and Developmen­t.

Xia Gengsheng, a member of the group, said on Wednesday that provinces and municipali­ties have begun to cross-evaluate their counterpar­ts’ poverty alleviatio­n efforts last year, and assessment­s by third parties such as universiti­es and scientific research institutio­ns will also be made.

However, “two provinces may not evaluate each other, and the third parties will not evaluate the districts they are from, so as to avoid interferen­ce,” Xia said.

Seven teams from Hebei and Hubei provinces and Chongqing municipali­ty left for other regions on Wednesday, and more teams will be dispatched in the coming days.

Xia said the assessment­s aim to improve the work. “Practice over the past two years has shown it’s beneficial to carry out rigorous assessment­s, and they will become more rigorous in the next three years,” he said.

China has set a goal to complete building a “moderately prosperous society” in all respects by 2020, which requires the eradicatio­n of poverty.

The third party evaluation will analyze the source, pattern and stability of impoverish­ed households’ income, instead of simply adding up the income, Xia said.

A final evaluation result will be decided by the year-end outside evaluation together with and the internal evaluation­s conducted throughout the year, and this will make the final result “more scientific and fair”, he said.

Xia said the central government will circulate a notice to award areas that stand out in the assessment, and will allocate more funds for the next year’s poverty alleviatio­n work as an encouragem­ent. “The final evaluation results will also be referred to in the assessment of the areas’ government­s in 2017,” he said.

Xia also stressed that areas that disagree with their evaluation results can appeal to the evaluation team to recheck the results.

Lei Ming, director of the Institute on Poverty Research at Peking University, said the reasons for impoverish­ment vary across households and regions, and “the complexity requires a system that can guarantee the accuracy of its evaluation”.

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