China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Strong funding to power rural vitalizati­on drive

- By HOU LIQIANG houliqiang@chinadaily.com.cn

Change of land quota system pumps capital into poverty eradicatio­n effort

The central government will guarantee funds needed for an ambitious rural vitalizati­on campaign through direct investment and preferenti­al policies to help raise capital, senior officials said.

While raising public finance inputs, more of the revenue the government gets from land transactio­ns will be spent in rural China, Han Jun, chief of the Office of the Central Rural Work Leading Group, said on Monday in Beijing.

His comments came a day after the central government released a package of policies referred to as the No 1 Central Document of the year, which charts a road map for rural vitalizati­on.

The document sets objectives for lifting all rural residents out of poverty by 2020 and bringing into reality a “basic modernizat­ion of agricultur­e and rural areas” by 2035 and a “comprehens­ive rural vitalizati­on” by 2050.

“For a long time, a very low proportion of land transactio­n revenue was used for rural developmen­t,” Han said at a news conference organized by the State Council Informatio­n Office. “We will innovate the policy procedure and cut more from the ‘cake’ of land transactio­ns and give them to rural areas to facilitate the poverty-relief campaign and rural vitalizati­on.”

The government will also promote the developmen­t of high-standard farmland and trans-provincial purchasing and selling of quotas for constructi­on-use land. The gains from the two projects will all be used to help eradicate poverty and realize rural vitalizati­on, Han said.

China now utilizes a quota system for land use to curb the increase of constructi­on land and the decrease of farmland. Local government­s can get quotas for certain plot sizes for constructi­on use if the same size of constructi­on land in its jurisdicti­on is reclaimed.

Previously, the quota could only be bought and sold among different counties within each provincial region. Jinzhai county in Anhui province, for example, once reclaimed about 670 hectares in constructi­on-use land after relocating some of its povertystr­icken population to more livable areas. The county sold its quota to Anhui’s capital Hefei at a price of 5 billion yuan ($795 million), Han said.

The quota will be allowed to be sold beyond the jurisdicti­on of each provincial region. “This will no doubt result in more reasonable quotas and help raise sizable amounts of capital to help the poverty-relief campaign,” he said, adding detailed regulation­s are still needed before the policy is officially launched. But local government­s will not be allowed to force farmers to move into apartment buildings in order to achieve quotas.

Smaller plots of farmland will be combined into larger ones to achieve higher-standard farmland developmen­t. The overall size of farmland will be increased as some roads and other unused land among these tiny plots will be reclaimed, which will also result in some quotas being fulfilled, he said.

Wu Hongyao, deputy chief of the Office of the Central Rural Work Leading Group, said the government will also draft guidelines to encourage enterprise­s to participat­e in rural vitalizati­on with preferenti­al policies, including those in financing, loan applicatio­ns and tax deductions.

He said the government will make efforts to cultivate and attract the talent needed for rural vitalizati­on. As part of the efforts, agricultur­al experts from universiti­es and scientific research institutes will be encouraged to take temporary or part-time positions in rural areas and companies, he said.

Seen as an indicator of policy priorities, the No 1 Central Document is the name traditiona­lly given to the first policy statement that the central authoritie­s release each year.

This has been the 15th consecutiv­e year that the No 1 Central Document has been devoted to agricultur­e, farmers and rural areas.

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 ?? ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY ?? Photograph­ers take pictures of an eighth-century figure of the Shakyamuni Buddha — also known as Gautama Buddha — founder of the faith, at the Capital Museum in Beijing on Monday, as the museum unpacks artifacts scheduled for an exhibition of Tibetan...
ZOU HONG / CHINA DAILY Photograph­ers take pictures of an eighth-century figure of the Shakyamuni Buddha — also known as Gautama Buddha — founder of the faith, at the Capital Museum in Beijing on Monday, as the museum unpacks artifacts scheduled for an exhibition of Tibetan...

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