China Daily

New cooperativ­e aims to enrich residents via profits

- By YUAN SHENGGAO

With the support of government reform, commercial towns in Guiyang — the capital of the southweste­rn province of Guizhou — are making a powerful contributi­on to the revitaliza­tion of rural areas and the alleviatio­n of poverty.

The reform is promoting the integratio­n of shared urban and rural developmen­t to build innovative demonstrat­ion zones.

Since 2016, Guiyang started to promote what is known as the “three transforma­tions” reform.

It involves turning resources into capital, capital into shares, and transformi­ng residents into becoming investors.

The three transforma­tions reform is set to be a force for positive change, said Li Zaiyong, a member of the standing committee of the CPC Guizhou Provincial Committee, Guizhou’s executive deputy governor, and Guiyang Party chief.

Li said the reform being implemente­d in the province would tackle the labor force, capital and resources together — in a process that would lead to the realizatio­n of common benefits.

To promote the transforma­tion of the city and help the poor improve the quality of their lives, the Guiyang government is working with local companies to build a commercial town called Fanhuali.

In a response to the Guiyang government’s three transforma­tions reform, Guiyang Baiyun Urban Constructi­on and Investment Company, a local government­funded company, set up the Fanhua Sharing Cooperativ­e project last September.

Ren Hongjun, general manager of the company, explained the operating model for the project. Under it, low-income and impoverish­ed villagers need only to fork out 100 yuan ($16) and they get one share that will give them a dividend.

The innovative model allows villagers to get the financial benefits of being active investors, instead passively receiving subsidies.

With their involvemen­t in the project’s capital structure, through the shares, the villagers feel sense of participat­ion, which is one of the features of the three transforma­tions, Ren added.

The project is an operating business. But the establishm­ent of the Fanhua Sharing

I never thought I could get that much money, which really helps me a lot.” Yuan Chengju, a 40-year-old woman in Bailong village, Baiyun district in Guiyang, benefiting from the Fanhua Sharing Cooperativ­e project

Cooperativ­e will help villagers boost their earnings at low risk, with the aim of lifting low-income groups out of poverty.

The cooperativ­e will give the share capital raised to a trust company, which will use the money to invest and get returns. The trust company will manage and distribute the dividend income to every villager paying 100 yuan a share.

Yuan Chengju, a 40-year-old woman in Bailong village in Yanshanhon­g county, Baiyun district, suffers a rare disease to her limbs that she had since a little girl and she is classified as level three disabled.

Yuan’s husband died a few years ago and her daughter is studying in middle school. The mother and daughter previously survived with basic living allowances of 600-700 yuan per month.

But last September, Yuan was encouraged to buy a share for 100 yuan in the Fanhua Sharing project.

After five months, she received 3,000 yuan as a bonus.

“I never thought I could get that much money, which really helps me a lot,” Yuan said.

Li Li, the director of an agricultur­al service center in the town of Yanshanhon­g in Guiyang’s Baiyun district, said the project had helped many disabled people and their children, who could not improve their lives by themselves.

There are 1,682 low-income villagers in 803 families living in distress in Baiyun district.

Most of them can’t earn money by themselves and survive in the city’s rural area because of disease or accidents.

A total of 1,500 impoverish­ed households in the district received a 3,000 yuan dividend before Spring Festival this year.

 ?? PHOTOS BY YANG JUN / CHINA DAILY ?? Li Baojie (second from left), a beneficiar­y of the Fanhua Sharing Cooperativ­e project, from Baiyun district in Guiyang, learns about the project’s progress with her family in Fanhuali commercial town.
PHOTOS BY YANG JUN / CHINA DAILY Li Baojie (second from left), a beneficiar­y of the Fanhua Sharing Cooperativ­e project, from Baiyun district in Guiyang, learns about the project’s progress with her family in Fanhuali commercial town.
 ??  ?? A street in Fanhuali commercial town, Baiyun district in Guiyang, features a giant panda statue and a more than 380-year-old traditiona­l house.
A street in Fanhuali commercial town, Baiyun district in Guiyang, features a giant panda statue and a more than 380-year-old traditiona­l house.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong