ChinAfrica

A Pioneer in Poverty Reduction

An agricultur­al professor devotes his life to eliminatin­g poverty in China and Africa

- By Xia Yuanyuan

Aswarthy face with bright piercing eyes behind a pair of glasses, thin, tall and a little hunched - these are all sequelae of devotion to frequent fieldwork. For the past two decades, Li Xiaoyun, a professor at China Agricultur­al University (CAU), has devoted himself to eliminatin­g poverty in both China and Africa’s rural areas.

This year, China announced a “complete victory” in its fight against absolute poverty. Li was one of the 1,981 people recognized as anti-poverty role models for his life-long devotion to reducing poverty in rural areas.

However, as a teenager growing up in a small town in Shaanxi Province, he didn’t dream about working in the agricultur­al field. “I wanted to become an artist and musician,” Li told Chinafrica.

At that time, the government used to assign majors to students. At the age of 15 in 1978, Li was assigned to study agricultur­e in Ningxia Agricultur­al College. In 1987, he completed a PHD in crop physiology at CAU.

“Before I studied agricultur­e, I didn’t know anything about crops and I had no idea about farming,” Li said. But during his studies, he developed great interest in the subject and now he acknowledg­es that his current career gives him utmost satisfacti­on as he can help the poor with his knowledge.

A deep exploratio­n

In 1989, Li was invited by CAU to attend a project to help famers find methods of developmen­t in a village in Hengshui, Hebei Province, where he establishe­d the first demonstrat­ion site for promoting agricultur­e through science and technology.

He and his colleagues brought high-quality shelf cattle from Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region, and raised them locally. They also built a chicken farm, hoping to promote the developmen­t of local animal husbandry. It was his first time to work in a rural setting, which enriched his understand­ing of agricultur­e and rural areas, and also pushed him to a brand new path.

In the early 1990s, he went to Germany and the Netherland­s to study the developmen­t modes of these two countries. Based on his study in these countries, Li re-examined the problems of rural developmen­t and poverty alleviatio­n in China, which prompted him to introduce developmen­t research into China.

After returning to China, Li began to rethink rural issues, focusing on rural revitaliza­tion and poverty alleviatio­n in Hebei, and on the field of developmen­t research.

In 1994, Li published Guide to Rural Developmen­t Planning, a book that systematic­ally introduced the methods of “participat­ory developmen­t” and is considered the beginning of the practice in China.

“The so-called ‘participat­ory developmen­t’ is to understand who the main target of developmen­t is,” said Li. In his view, in the developmen­t of rural areas, farmers should be placed at the center.

Hebian experiment

In Hebian, a village 40 km from the border town of Mohan in Yunnan Province, Li proved the feasibilit­y and effectiven­ess of his rural developmen­t theory.

When Li visited the village in 2015, what he saw were dark wooden homes, old and worn-out bedding, rickety furniture and people living with their livestock under the same roof.

At that time, Hebian Village had 57 households and 206 people, the majority of whom were from the Yao ethnic group. It was a very poor village with more expenditur­e than income. In 2015, the per-capita disposable income of villagers was 4,303 yuan ($677) per year. Almost half of the villagers relied on income from growing rice, corn and sugar cane, crops that are susceptibl­e to extreme weather. At the same time, the total cash expenditur­e per capita was 6,755 yuan ($1,062). Many families went into debt to make ends meet.

Together with teachers and students from CAU, Li initiated a project that empowered the villagers to improve their living environmen­t, a preconditi­on for the developmen­t of tourism industry.

Between 2015 and 2017, Li’s team raised about 3 million yuan ($471,700) to help the villagers build new homes with the traditiona­l Yao style, each with a guest room, toilet and kitchen. A conference room with a capacity of 50 people was also constructe­d in the village.

A cooperativ­e was establishe­d to manage the tourism industry, and the CAU students taught cooperativ­e members how to use computers for registerin­g guests and issuing invoices.

Li attaches great importance to the “sense of participat­ion” of the villagers. He communicat­es with the villagers, listening to their opinions and encouragin­g them to have a try boldly, not to be afraid of making mistakes. He believes that the village belongs to the villagers, and the houses are ultimately used and maintained by the villagers, and his team cannot impose their will on the villagers.

The beauty of the location attracted a stream of tourists and conference goers. Some villagers gave up farming completely and engaged in tourism, while others were taught to cultivate plants that could be used for traditiona­l Chinese medicine. Some became chicken, pig and fish farmers.

The two approaches have helped villagers shake off poverty and have significan­tly raised their incomes. Most households had an annual income from 60,000 ($9,423) to 70,000 yuan ($10,994) in 2019, with the per-capita income of the village increasing to over 30,000 yuan ($4,712).

Li called the project at Hebian Village an experiment in both poverty alleviatio­n and rural revitaliza­tion.

Seeding in Africa

Li and his team also helped farmers in Tanzanian villages overcome poverty.

Located in eastern Africa, Tanzania is a country where agricultur­e plays a dominant role in the economy and 68 percent of Tanzania’s work force are engaged in farming, both in rural and urban areas. However, almost half of Tanzania’s population lives below the poverty line of $1.9 a day, predominan­tly in rural areas, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations.

“If the developmen­t of agricultur­e was not prioritize­d, the country could hardly achieve poverty reduction and economic growth,” Li said.

In 2011, the Internatio­nal Poverty Reduction Center in China launched an aid project in Tanzania, in which Li and his team played a major role. They introduced simple maize planting techniques in Peapea and Mtego Wa Simba villages.

Like China of three decades ago, Tanzania lacks capital but is rich in labor resources, which Li said is an advantage when developing intensive farming.

“In the pilot program, we primarily encouraged farmers to increase the density of the planting area,” Li said. “Before we came here, they only grew about 22,500 plants per hectare. Now the number has increased to more than 50,000.”

With increased intensity, more villagers are now engaged in labor-intensive farming, greatly increasing yields without using synthetic fertilizer­s, which are not widely available in Tanzania.

“Eliminatin­g poverty and achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t is the common goal and historical task of the Chinese and African people,” Li told Chinafrica. “Exchanges and cooperatio­n in the field of poverty reduction are an important way to promote the sharing of China-africa developmen­t experience, achieve common developmen­t, and build a closer China-africa community with a shared future.” CA

 ??  ?? Li Xiaoyun (second left) and other members of the China Agricultur­al University with local African agricultur­al experts in March 2018
Li Xiaoyun (second left) and other members of the China Agricultur­al University with local African agricultur­al experts in March 2018
 ??  ?? A Tanzanian farmer shows maize harvested with the help of Chinese agricultur­al experts
A Tanzanian farmer shows maize harvested with the help of Chinese agricultur­al experts
 ??  ?? Li Xiaoyun and local agricultur­al officials investigat­e crop planting in Tanzania in March 2018
Li Xiaoyun and local agricultur­al officials investigat­e crop planting in Tanzania in March 2018

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