China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Farmers benefiting from land-use rights

- By QIUQUANLIN in Nanxiong, Guangdong qiuquanlin@chiandaily.com.cn

LiHaiming was called back home two months early before ChineseNew­Year, and not only because of preparatio­ns for the traditiona­l family gathering.

In Li’s village in Nanxiong, a city of about 450,000 people in northern Guangdong province, agricultur­al and land resources officials were busy verifying farmland usage rights for rural families, a nationwide mission started in 2013.

Li’s 0.2 hectares of farmland in Liren, a village with 80 households, was formerly rented to families for growing rice and other crops while he and his wife worked in a furniture factory in the prosperous Pearl River Delta.

“I was afraid the farmland would eventually become the property of other families,” Li said.

After the verificati­on of farmland usage and contract rights, Li was guaranteed a certificat­e of land-use rights, which specify the ownership, contract and operating rights of the land.

“I will probably transfer the land-use rights to others who are interested in growing large-scale agricultur­al products,” he said.

In Li’s village, a growing number of families are interested in transferri­ng their land-use rights to individual­s and business groups.

“After verifying land-use rights, we are able to make more money by allowing the planting of more cash crops by agricultur­al companies or individual investors,” Li said.

According to a document issued by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council in 2013, China will finish verificati­on of rural land ownership and land-use rights by 2018.

“Verifying land ownership rights and land-use rights is of great importance to the protection of farmers’ interests,” said Liu Zhifu, deputy director of the agricultur­al bureau in Shaoguan city, which administer­sNanxiong.

The“No1central­document”, a name traditiona­lly given to the first policy statement released by the central authoritie­s in the year, which was issued on Sunday, reiterated calls for the implementa­tion of rural land reform, which separates farmland ownership rights, contract rights and operating rights.

According to the document, farmers are allowed to earn more by transferri­ng their land rights to individual­s or agricultur­al business groups.

“New industries and new types of businesses will become engines of rural developmen­t and help increase the income of farmers,” Liu said.

According to Liu, land-use rights for more than 40,000 hectares of farmland in Shaoguan, which administra­tes Nanxiong, were verified by the end of this year.

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