China Daily

More steps advised for rural economy

- By WANG XIAODONG wangxiaodo­ng@chinadaily.com.cn

More measures are needed to attract talent to rural areas to help developmen­t, Jin Sanlin, a senior researcher of rural economies at the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council, said on Wednesday.

“In general, China is still undergoing rapid urbanizati­on, and more people will continue to migrate from rural areas to cities,” Jin said at the 5th Forum on New Urbanizati­on and Social Integratio­n of the Migrant Population, which was hosted in Beijing by the National Health Commission and United Nations representa­tives in China.

“However, a top priority should be to change the oneway flow of population from rural areas to cities and improve the mechanism for a two-way flow of population between urban and rural areas to attract talent of all sorts to contribute to rural rejuvenati­on,” he said.

Based on optimistic estimates, around 400 million people in China will still live in rural areas by 2035, accounting for 30 percent of the country’s population, he said, adding that rejuvenati­ng rural areas is essential for China’s modernizat­ion.

Wang Qian, chief for migrant population at the National Health Commission, said the number of migrants last year reached 244 million. Of those, between 70 and 80 percent were moving from rural to urban areas.

The government should carry out training programs for new profession­al farmers, and intensify talent cultivatio­n for rural-oriented talent, such as profession­al managers, craftsmen, cultural experts and agricultur­al intangible heritage inheritors, Jin said.

It is suggested that policies encourage profession­als from universiti­es and institutes to take temporary posts in rural areas and for agricultur­al enterprise­s to contribute to rural developmen­t, he said.

Although urbanizati­on is still underway in China, in more developed areas such as Zhejiang and Jiangsu provinces the population flow from cities to rural areas for job opportunit­ies such as e-commerce and tourism is increasing, Jin said.

More than 4.5 million migrant workers have returned to their hometowns to start their own businesses in recent years, according to the Ministry of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs.

The ministry will continue to support migrant workers, including college students, retired soldiers and technician­s and profession­als, in starting their own businesses in rural areas, through preferenti­al policies including land use and financial services, it said.

A top priority should be to ... improve the mechanism for a two-way flow of population between urban and rural areas to attract talent.”

Jin Sanlin, researcher at the Developmen­t Research Center of the State Council

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