Contemporary World (English)

Strength From the Soil: Agricultur­e and rural developmen­t get fresh policy support

AGRICULTUR­E AND RURAL DEVELOPMEN­T GET FRESH POLICY SUPPORT

- Li Xiaoyang

From the rise to the recent ease of Sino-U.S. trade frictions, the soybean has been a hotly contested topic throughout the period. While affirming that the two countries are important partners in the soybean trade, China has highlighte­d the importance of increasing soybean output at home as it strives to boost the domestic agricultur­al sector.

Soybean planting is only one of the many issues covered by the No.1 Central Document released on February 19, the first policy statement of the year jointly released by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and the State Council. It keeps issues relating

to agricultur­e, rural areas and farmers’ welfare as the top agenda, for the 16th year in a row.

“The toughest task facing China in terms of eradicatin­g poverty lies in these issues,” Du Zhixiong, Vice Director of the Rural Developmen­t Institute at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told Beijing Review.

A sound agricultur­al sector and steady rural developmen­t are essential for under- pinning the economy and taking the nation closer to its goal of building its society into a moderately prosperous one by 2020, the document says.

As it is introduced, the output and efficiency of agricultur­al production will be enhanced by harnessing technology and optimizing the agricultur­al structure. Poverty will be tackled and the environmen­t in rural areas improved. In addition, ensuring a stable supply of green and high- quality agricultur­al products gets priority as well as improving the livelihood­s of rural residents.

Han Changfu, Minister of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs (MARA), told a press conference on February 20 that agricultur­al and rural developmen­t registered steady progress in 2018, which provided strong support to China’s sound socioecono­mic growth. “Since China is facing stronger downward economic pressure

and a changing external environmen­t with mounting risks and challenges, it needs to maintain its focus on agricultur­e and enable it to further contribute to domestic economic growth,” he said.

Focus on modernizat­ion

According to Zhang Hongyu, Vice President of the China Institute for Rural Studies, Tsinghua University, this year, a priority for the authoritie­s is to keep grain production above 600 million tons to ensure grain security for the large population. Official data shows in 2018, total grain output reached 658 million tons. The policy document emphasizes securing the supply of major agricultur­al products and boosting production of high-quality agricultur­al products or those in short supply, such as soybeans and dairy products. The target is to keep grain-growing areas at 110 million hectares and arable land area over 120 million hectares. By 2020, over 53.33 million hectares of high-standard farmland will be developed.

Farming will be modernized to improve agricultur­al output and efficiency. Liao Xiyuan, an official with the MARA, said technologi­cal innovation is key to promoting agricultur­al modernizat­ion. The document stresses making breakthrou­ghs in key agricultur­al technologi­es and independen­t innovation in areas such as smart agricultur­e, heavy agricultur­al machinery and green agricultur­al inputs.

It also promises a new subsidy policy to better protect farmers’ interests and encourage financial institutio­ns to lend more to agribusine­sses. New agricultur­al production entities such as household farms and agricultur­al cooperativ­es are to be developed.

Du stressed that individual agricultur­al households should also be supported. “Individual producers need to be connected more closely with cooperativ­es, leading enterprise­s and service providers in production chains so that farmers can get more benefits,” he said.

While the rural economy is restructur­ed, tourism and leisure agricultur­e, combining sightseein­g and recreation, are being promoted to boost the rural economy. MARA has developed nearly 400 demonstrat­ion counties with rural sightseein­g and recreation­al facilities nationwide. Last year, tourists paid 3 billion trips to rural destinatio­ns, according to official data. The promotion of modern agricultur­al product process

ing, which has industrial­ized agricultur­al produce, also augments farmers’ profits by improving the value added of their products.

“We need to fully utilize the natural and cultural resources of rural areas to diversify local economic drivers, develop full-fledged product-processing chains, and tap into the potential of agricultur­e for deep integratio­n of rural industries,” Ye Xingqing, a researcher with the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council, said.

Improved rural life

At the Central Economic Work Conference in 2017, the annual meeting to set the national economic agenda, the authoritie­s said preventing major risks, pollution control and targeted poverty alleviatio­n would be the “three tough battles” for the next three years.

The 2019 policy document also emphasizes the importance of poverty alleviatio­n to advance rural residents’ wellbeing. In 2018, 13.86 million people were lifted out of poverty, according to the National Bureau of Statistics. To create a moderately prosperous society in all respects by 2020, there will be further policies to improve the living standards of all rural residents living below the national poverty line of a 2,300 yuan ($338) income annually.

In extremely poor regions, residents will be given financial assistance, while families living in inaccessib­le areas with little earning opportunit­ies will be relocated. Measures will be taken to nurture talent in such areas.

According to the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, 100 million rural residents will become urban dwellers by 2020. However, the relocated people will be allowed to keep their rural land even after they become registered urban dwellers.

To prevent rural residents from slipping back into poverty, rural industries with local features will be started to diversify farmers’ income channels. Ecommerce has a major role in this. The boom in e-commerce has created new opportunit­ies for rural developmen­t and both rural income and consumptio­n have risen.

According to Ministry of Commerce spokespers­on Gao Feng, domestic online sales of agricultur­al products totaled 230.5 billion yuan ($34.4 billion) in 2018, up 33.8% from the previous year. Online retail sales amounted to 1.37 trillion yuan ($201.47 billion) in rural areas with a year-on-year growth of 30.4%, indicating the consumptio­n po- tential of rural buyers.

Developing the digital economy in rural areas will support agricultur­al developmen­t and reduce the urban-rural income gap, Qu Dongyu, Vice Minister of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, said.

Poverty alleviatio­n also requires new jobs and vocational training for rural labor forces, the document notes. New businesses will be encouraged and supporting platforms built up in rural areas.

Apart from raising the rural income, measures will be taken to upgrade rural life. Infrastruc­ture, including roads, grids and logistics networks, will be improved, pollution treatment enhanced, and public services such as education, culture, healthcare and social security boosted.

A more open market

Foreign investment in various sectors, including modern agricultur­e, is being encouraged, according to a draft list of encouraged industries for foreign investment released on February 1.

The policy document says agricultur­al cooperatio­n with countries involved in the Belt and Road Initiative will be enhanced. Imports of agricultur­al products in short supply domestical­ly will be expanded and import channels diversifie­d. More multinatio­nal agricultur­al corporatio­ns will be fostered.

According to Jiao Shanwei, Editor in Chief of the grain portal Cngrain.com, China has been opening wider to foreign investors in the agricultur­al sector over the past two years. “Foreign enterprise­s’ participat­ion will help modernize the agricultur­al sector, achieve sustainabl­e developmen­t of land, and improve the quality of domestic agricultur­al output,” he said.

China produces only 16 million tons of soybeans domestical­ly every year while the domestic demand can reach 110 million tons annually. Of this, about 90 percent has to be met through imports, making China the world’s largest soybean importer, according to official data. The document says domestic soybean production will be expanded by increasing planting areas.

Yin Ruifeng, an analyst with MARA, said rice and corn produce a greater net profit than soybean. The output and quality of domestic soybean can be improved only by harnessing advanced technology.

According to the soybean rejuvenati­on plan proposed in the document, planting will be increased in the traditiona­l soybean- growing regions of Heilongjia­ng, Anhui and Henan provinces. The target is to expand the soybeanpla­nting area to 9.33 million hectares and increase the soybean self-sufficienc­y rate by 1 percentage point by 2020.

According to Han, China’s soybean supplies will still partially rely on imports given its large domestic demands.

“Along with other sources, the United States will continue to be an important partner of China in terms of the soybean trade,” he said.

 ??  ?? Zhang Li, who heads a local agricultur­al cooperativ­e, uses his phone to adjust the temperatur­e in a greenhouse for vegetables in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province, on January 22.
Zhang Li, who heads a local agricultur­al cooperativ­e, uses his phone to adjust the temperatur­e in a greenhouse for vegetables in Taiyuan, Shanxi Province, on January 22.
 ??  ?? Women from the Miao ethnic group produce embroideri­es as souvenirs for tourists in Fenghuang County, Hunan Province, on February 18.
Women from the Miao ethnic group produce embroideri­es as souvenirs for tourists in Fenghuang County, Hunan Province, on February 18.
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