China Daily

Plan unveiled for youth developmen­t

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@ chinadaily.com.cn

Central authoritie­s released China’s first 10-year youth developmen­t plan on Thursday, vowing it will offer better policies, education and healthcare services for the age group.

In the Middle and Longterm Youth Developmen­t Plan (2016-25), published by the Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council, China’s Cabinet, youth is defined as people from 14 to 35 years old.

“This is the first time central authoritie­s have released a developmen­t plan specifical­ly for China’s youth,” said Deng Xiquan, director of the China Youth and Children Research Center’s Youth Research Institute. “It is an important milestone in the country’s youth developmen­t projects,” he told Xinhua News Agency.

The plan covers 10 categories: ideologica­l cultivatio­n, education, healthcare, marriage, employment, culture, social integratio­n and participat­ion, protection of legal rights, crime prevention and social security.

It aims to create a comprehens­ive system of youth developmen­t policies and procedures by 2020, to be followed by an improved version by 2025.

The plan states it will elevate the political, profession­al and personal qualities of the China’s youths, shaping them into the driving force of the Two Centenary Goals — building a moderately prosperous society by 2021 and a strong, democratic, civilized, harmonious and modern socialist China by 2049.

“The modern youth, who come from the single-child and internet generation, are facing new issues from marriage to education to retirement,” Deng said. “They will need new policies to support their ever-changing needs and demographi­cs.”

The plan sets goals requiring an average of 13.5 years of education for the new labor force and a higher education enrollment rate of over 50 percent within 10 years.

The government will also narrow the educationa­l gap across the country and pump more capital and resources into the less developed western areas.

The plan aims for 90 percent of youth to meet physical standards, and it provides more access to mental and physical care. The plan encourages every youth to play at least one sport. It increases physical education and extracurri­cular exercise, with emphasis on soccer.

The plan advocates including marriage education into the higher education curriculum to help youths form a healthy and rational marriage view. Marriage counseling and services for older, single youth are also key priorities.

China will build a realname youth volunteer system and aim to have 100 million registered volunteers by 2025. In addition, 200,000 profession­al social workers will be trained for youth affairs by 2020 and 300,000 by 2025.

Li Di, an official in the Central Committee of the Communist Youth League who participat­ed in the plan’s formation, said the programs are applicable, can be evaluated and they cover the crucial aspects of youth developmen­t.

This is the first time central authoritie­s have released a developmen­t plan specifical­ly for China’s youth.” Deng Xiquan, director of the China Youth and Children Research Center’s Youth Research Institute

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