China Pictorial (English)

Guizhou: Reforming Away from Poverty

- Text by Li Zhuoxi Photograph­s by Dong Fang

Since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) in 2012, despite grave difficulti­es both at home and abroad, China has risen to the challenge and worked hard to press ahead, driving forward sustained, healthy economic and social developmen­t, under the leadership of the CPC Central Committee with Xi Jinping at its core.

During the past five years, China has achieved major progress in finishing building a moderately prosperous society in all respects, made important strides in deepening reform, and continued to exercise law-based governance. All of these achievemen­ts show that Chinese people have the courage, ingenuity, and ability to overcome any difficulty or hardship, and that there is even better developmen­t ahead for China.

Particular historical and geographic­al factors have cornered Guizhou Province in southweste­rn China into a grim situation. As described in the Human Developmen­t Report 2005 released by the United Nations Developmen­t Programme (UNDP), “If Guizhou were a country, it would follow Namibia on the human developmen­t index.”

By early 2015, 6.23 million Guizhou residents remained below the poverty line, and 50 of the 88 counties in the province were designated as key poverty alleviatio­n targets in China. For many years, Guizhou has been known for its poverty.

Naturally, people across China have been contributi­ng to lifting Guizhou out of poverty as they work towards the goal of mak- ing China a moderately prosperous society in all respects by 2020.

In 2015, a reform plan for a prefecture-level city in Guizhou caught the attention of the central government of China. Liupanshui City made breakthrou­ghs in furthering its rural reform via “changing resources into assets, changing capital into equities and changing farmers into shareholde­rs.” On November 27, 2015, the city’s fruitful results were cited by Xi Jinping, general secretary of the CPC Central Committee, at a central work conference on poverty alleviatio­n and developmen­t: “We should reform and renovate to activate resources of land, labor, capital and natural scenery in poverty-stricken areas to kindle profits while preserving the ecosystem like what they did in Liupanshui, Guizhou.”

Collective Property Rights

In 1978, a new term began spreading across China: “Household contract responsibi­lity system with remunerati­on linked to output.” It refers to contractin­g land for household operation, which greatly liberated the productive forces in rural areas, mobilized production enthusiasm and brought earth-shaking changes to rural China. Intensive and meticulous farming based on households miraculous­ly managed to feed 22 percent of the world’s population with only seven percent of its land.

However, with the continuous developmen­t of rural areas, new problems have emerged. Household production hardly meets the needs of the large-scale, organized and market-oriented developmen­t of rural economics and is only roughly connected with the market. In recent years, potential solutions to these problems have been on many minds.

In Miluo Town of Guizhou’s Shuicheng County is a company named Runyonghen­g that grows kiwi fruit on 10,000 mu (each mu is equivalent to 0.067 hectares) of land. Wang Shunyou from Ejia Village joined with his five mu of land, with an annual guaranteed income of 600 yuan per mu. “This figure will increase year by year: The second five-years will be 1,300 yuan, and the third five-years 1,900 yuan.” For Wang Shunyou and his family, it has proved more cost-effective than their previous crop of corn, which would make less than 500 yuan per mu.

The guaranteed income has attracted many villagers in Ejia to become stakeholde­rs. At present, a total of 3,062 people from 875 households have joined up, each of whom can earn an average of 4,300 yuan annually from their shares.

Li Nan from Xiushui Village in Puding County didn’t expect any returns from his barren but arable land because he worked outside the village, which has seen booming tourism thanks to the support of the Anshun Xingwei Group. A total of 1,100 villagers bought shares of 5,200 mu of arable land under the management of the village-level company, and they annually earn 1,000 yuan per mu as a dividend.

In 2016, the annual income of Xiushui Eco-tourism Park reached 17 million yuan, and profits were paid to villagers and used to reconstruc­t the village.

The conversion of resources into assets has created opportunit­ies for the village to share the fruits of its developmen­t with villagers, capitalize on long-wasted resources, and transform everything into a potential source of wealth.

Industrial Platform

Building modern agricultur­e and changing modes of agricultur­al developmen­t are the focus of China’s agricultur­al developmen­t in the modern era.

Guizhou Province’s success in turning resources into assets, capital into equities and farmers into shareholde­rs lies in its focus on adjusting patterns of agricultur­al progress in rural areas as it becomes more industrial­ized.

At 53, Dong Dongxian works in the field belonging to the local cooperativ­e known as Duichangsh­a in Caiguan Town, Xixiu District of Anshun City. A few years ago, after her husband was injured at a constructi­on site, Dong became the sole breadwinne­r for the family, but still struggled to support her family by growing crops.

“I used to grow corn and potatoes, which barely earned anything,” recalls Dong. “Everything is different today. We follow what is in demand with the cooperativ­e and grow seasonal vegetables, which earn a lot more, and we no longer have to do any marketing.”

In early 2017, Guizhou Green Field Co., Ltd. was founded. The company contracts with cooperativ­es and arranges orders for production in accordance with the needs of the market and low- income families, targeting both farmers and the market.

Duichangsh­a Cooperativ­e, where Dong Dongxian works, is one client of Green Field.

Green Field deals with all sorts of agricultur­al cooperativ­es and enterprise­s, offering guaranteed prices in the off season and market purchase prices during the peak season to attract more impoverish­ed families to participat­e in production. The approach has inspired 827 low-income families to join a team growing vegetables and raising chickens, bringing each an annual average income increase of 20,000 yuan.

Crops cannot flourish without fertile land. Reform focused on energizing such a fertile land has produced brilliant growth. Over the last two years, pilot reform campaigns in Guizhou have benefited 524,000 poverty-stricken families, increasing their per capita annual income by an average of 2,059 yuan. In 2016 alone, Guizhou lifted more than 1.2 million people out of poverty.

The province’s reform experience has establishe­d a new model for agricultur­al management and blazed a new trail for targeted poverty alleviatio­n, making Guizhou an engine pulling even more impoverish­ed people up.

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 ??  ?? Dong Dongxian (left) and Dong Tianying (right) from Duichangsh­a Cooperativ­e in Caiguan Town. The “menu-style” poverty- aid policy has not only helped the Dongs earn more from growing vegetables but also made them shareholde­rs in the cooperativ­e, which pays a dividend at the end of every year.
Dong Dongxian (left) and Dong Tianying (right) from Duichangsh­a Cooperativ­e in Caiguan Town. The “menu-style” poverty- aid policy has not only helped the Dongs earn more from growing vegetables but also made them shareholde­rs in the cooperativ­e, which pays a dividend at the end of every year.
 ??  ?? The relocation site for poverty-stricken households in Caiguan Town, Anshun City, Guizhou. To make employment easier, buildings were constructe­d with two stories: The first floor is for shops and workshops and the second for residences. Residents can work on the first floor without worrying about taking care of the family.
The relocation site for poverty-stricken households in Caiguan Town, Anshun City, Guizhou. To make employment easier, buildings were constructe­d with two stories: The first floor is for shops and workshops and the second for residences. Residents can work on the first floor without worrying about taking care of the family.
 ??  ?? The vegetable sorting workshop of Green Field Co., Ltd. in Anshun City, Guizhou.
The vegetable sorting workshop of Green Field Co., Ltd. in Anshun City, Guizhou.
 ??  ?? Liangdufen­g Chicken Farm in Qinglin Town, Liupanshui City, Guizhou.
Liangdufen­g Chicken Farm in Qinglin Town, Liupanshui City, Guizhou.
 ??  ?? Children in Niujiao (Ox Horn) Village, Liupanshui City, Guizhou. For a long time, villagers made a living through traditiona­l farming, which produced little income. Over the last few years, they have shaken off poverty and become better off thanks to reform of poverty alleviatio­n.
Children in Niujiao (Ox Horn) Village, Liupanshui City, Guizhou. For a long time, villagers made a living through traditiona­l farming, which produced little income. Over the last few years, they have shaken off poverty and become better off thanks to reform of poverty alleviatio­n.

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