China Daily

Laptop no reason to deny student living allowance

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A 22-YEAR-OLD STUDENT, surnamed Liu, in Siyuan College, Xi’an, Northwest China’s Shaanxi province, has been denied poverty allowance by the school because he has a laptop. Liu has registered as a poor student in his hometown in the northern part of Shaanxi and, according to regulation­s, is entitled to receive 6,000 yuan ($900) as living allowance. Beijing News commented on Thursday:

The provincial department­s of education and finance have said students who own laptops cannot be poor and thus are not eligible to receive living allowance. From the institutio­nal point of view, this is understand­able.

But this logic made sense when laptops were very expensive, and only a few could afford to buy them. Given the importance of computers today, especially for college students, and their falling prices, how can one assume that only well-off students can buy laptops? And since college students have to rely on computers, even those who are poor have no choice but to buy one.

So having a computer does not make a student ineligible for living allowance.

In his The Wealth of Nations, Adam Smiths says: “… poverty is not just scary lack of necessitie­s of life, even more frightenin­g is the resulting exclusion from social life.” To truly alleviate poverty, we should keep this in mind, so that the poor can get real help.

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