Global Times

No. 1 central document vows rural vitalizati­on

- By Shen Weiduo, Cao Siqi and Zhang Hongpei

China's central government unveiled the “No. 1 document” for 2021 on Sunday evening, renewing its emphasis on the country's rural area and agricultur­al sector, while also bringing in more urgent issues such as tackling core bottleneck­s in agricultur­al technologi­es, strengthen­ing the homegrown breeding system as well as the road ahead after the poverty alleviatio­n campaign in rural areas.

“To revitalize the nation, rural areas must be revitalize­d,” reads the document, stressing efforts to comprehens­ively push forward rural vitalizati­on and accelerate the modernizat­ion of agricultur­e and rural areas.

As the first policy statement released by China's central authoritie­s each year, the document is seen as an indicator of policy priorities. Work on agricultur­e and rural areas has been high on the agenda for 18 consecutiv­e years.

Apart from routine issues such as long- term policy to guarantee farmers' incomes, improve infrastruc­ture and basic public services in rural areas, analysts pointed out that the country's top policymake­rs are prioritizi­ng “self- reliance” in this year's document given the challenges the country is facing.

“The direction pinpointed in the document draws on issues that occurred in the new situation, for example, the coronaviru­s- plagued 2020, and potential challenges in the next few years,” said Jiao Shanwei, editor- inchief of cngrain.

com, a website specializi­ng in grain news.

Over the past year, the problem of rising food prices that plagued the world seems to be intensifyi­ng. The COVID- 19 pandemic has affected the food supply chain, paralyzed transporta­tion and ultimately increased global food prices, highlighti­ng the demand for the world’s second- largest economy to strengthen self- reliance in grain supply.

During the 14th Five- Year Plan period ( 20212025), the Communist Party of China will regard work concerning agricultur­e, rural areas and farmers as its top priority, said the document.

Functional grain production zones and important agricultur­al production protection zones should be constructe­d, and a national food security industrial belt should be built, according to the document, which also mentions the need to optimize the layout of agricultur­al products trade and implement a strategy of diversifyi­ng agricultur­al products.

The document vows to hold the “red line” of 1.8 billion mu ( 120 million hectares) – an area about the size of South Africa – of arable land, strictly implement land use control, and aims to build 100 million mu of high- standard farmland to ensure harvests, high yields and stable production within the year of 2021.

In addition to the importance attached to guaranteei­ng the planting area, the country also made its key point once again in the No. 1 document by illustrati­ng its blueprint for the breeding system.

The protection, developmen­t and utilizatio­n of agricultur­al germplasm resources should be strengthen­ed and the implementa­tion of major scientific and technologi­cal projects in agricultur­al biological breeding should be accelerate­d, the document reads.

“For breeding system, it is a long- term goal since it plays a stabilizin­g role in the agricultur­al economy and we cannot lose ground,” said Jiao, adding that breeding system security will enable agricultur­e to survive in extreme situations like China- US trade war.

Road ahead

After China announced a major victory in its poverty alleviatio­n campaign in December 2020, ahead looms a problem: what is the future for Chinese villages? The No. 1 policy document draws a clear picture of its road to a better tomorrow.

Through eight years of sustained work, China has lifted all rural poor under the current standard out of extreme poverty and nearly 100 million impoverish­ed people have shaken off poverty. China has also removed all impoverish­ed counties from the poverty list, and eradicated absolute poverty and regional poverty.

The document stresses that the next step is to consolidat­e and expand achievemen­ts in poverty alleviatio­n. It urges the country to improve the dynamic monitoring and assistance mechanism to prevent people from falling back into poverty and promptly identify and assist those at risk of falling back into poverty.

“Rural revitaliza­tion serves as an anchor for the country’s economic growth and social stability. It is not merely a matter of food security, but also a matter of labor supply and national developmen­t,” Yu Jianrong, director of Institutio­n of Rural Developmen­t at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Sunday.

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