The Borneo Post

Poverty road in China drives some to riches, leaves others behind

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BAOJING, China: At his village along a ‘poverty alleviatio­n road’ in Hunan province, farmer Liu Qingyou shares a booklet detailing how Xi Jinping’s government has hoisted him and 100 million other Chinese from the breadline.

In it, the cause of his family’s hardship is diagnosed as ‘illness’ and ‘schooling’, followed by a list of ways the state has helped, from grain subsidies to improving the yield of their orange groves.

Authoritie­s designated his family as impoverish­ed in 2014 as Xi ramped up a ‘targeted poverty relief’ strategy that sent officials door-to-door to assess poorer households.

For Liu, the following years brought another boost: a new road cu ing through Hunan’s mountainou­s countrysid­e, helping transport produce to market twice as quickly and giving valuable links to nearby towns.

But it has not been a smooth journey up China’s economic ladder.

Liu says his harvests have not improved despite efforts by local authoritie­s to help him diversify his crop.

Meanwhile, his wooden house does li le to keep out temperatur­es that plunge close to zero in the winter.

From his vantage point, Liu and his family of five still live modestly, and he worries for their future — despite being counted as li ed from poverty.

“We can get by,” he said. “But our house is bad.”

He wants what some others have received from the state: rese lement or enough funds to build a brick home.

The reasons he did not qualify are unclear to him.

“Why can’t we have the same?” he asked.

War on poverty

China’s decades-long war on want has yielded remarkable results.

“Over the past 40 years, China’s economic growth has resulted in more than 800 million Chinese escaping extreme poverty... This is an extraordin­ary achievemen­t,” said Martin Raiser, the World Bank’s country director for China.

In 2015, Xi vowed to eradicate extreme poverty by 2020, a pillar of the Communist Party’s goal to build a ‘moderately prosperous society’ by the 100th anniversar­y of its founding later this year.

Xi declared that the target was reached last year, heralding a ‘major victory’.

But reality on the ground is patchier, with experts warning that rising incomes have made China’s poverty line outdated.

Complex criteria to determine who gets aid has also fuelled unhappines­s.

Liu’s family was officially li ed from poverty around four years a er being designated — the product of a policy shi by Beijing away from relying on the breakneck growth that pulled nearly a billion people out of penury.

Authoritie­s set a poverty line based on income of around US$2.30 a day and offered targeted help to those under the line.

But China is now an uppermiddl­e income country, for which the World Bank suggests a benchmark that doubles the current threshold.

“The current low, unidimensi­onal, rural poverty line no longer reflects what it means to be poor in China’s rapidly evolving society,” said Terry Sicular of the University of Western Ontario.

Contacting villagers remains sensitive, with six cars of officials showing up unexpected­ly during AFP’s Hunan visit.

Authoritie­s asked about AFP’s interview plans and insisted on

The current low, unidimensi­onal, rural poverty line no longer reflects what it means to be poor in China’s rapidly evolving society. Terry Sicular

accompanyi­ng reporters around a er acquiring details like travel history for Covid-19 prevention.

A police officer showed up at another interview, staying to observe for ‘sensitive’ issues.

Patchy results

The Communist Party has based its legitimacy on delivering continued growth.

Ahead of the 2020 deadline, party cadres sprung into action: identifyin­g poor households, distributi­ng funds, and building infrastruc­ture like the Qianqing road by Liu’s house.

But behind the poverty drive is at least US$1 trillion in loans over five years, and a burden of cost falling increasing­ly to local government­s.

In Hunan, lack of local funds initially crippled progress of the winding, 63-kilometre road — finally completed a er state broadcaste­r reports piled pressure on authoritie­s.

“Transport became more convenient... this has increased the income of regular folk by at least 30 per cent,” Liu said.

But although Liu received a grant as a poverty-stricken household, he says business has been weak.

A low table sits in his sparselyde­corated house, by a stove where his son readies a lunch of cured bacon — a Hunan specialty.

A local government decision to diversify into tea plantation­s and plant new orange varieties hit earnings, he added.

“Before the trees were removed, our family could earn 20,000 to 30,000 yuan (US$3,100-4,700) a year,” said Liu. This dropped to a fraction of the amount.

The upside

There are plenty of signs of growing wealth, however.

Per capita income of povertystr­icken households in Hunan grew from around 2,300 yuan to 12,200 yuan over five years, official figures say.

The Qianqing road is a sign of the area’s increased wealth.

Farmer Xiang Xiuli, 53, said villagers no longer had to carry produce across difficult terrain to the nearest roads for sales.

Her family said their orange business had doubled in size and their children were now able to a end be er schools.

For farmer Mi Jiazhi, officially li ed from poverty in 2017, things have never been be er.

“We have all sorts of resources,” said the 71-year-old.

“Things are good now... I can have 30,000 to 40,000 yuan in income (annually),” he said.

With be er income and help from his children, he will soon move into a newer, larger house.

“I’m very happy,” he added.

Backslidin­g

But more work is needed to ensure the mass move up the economic chain is sustained.

As the poverty line rises, many city-dwellers will fall below it too, cautioned Raiser.

Beijing has already flagged the risk of backslidin­g, while villagers said Covid-19 also weighed on earnings.

Poverty alleviatio­n official Ou Qingping warned in December that some people still reliant on aid had “insufficie­nt” means to grow wealthier.

“Once alleviatio­n policies are suspended, they are likely to return to poverty,” he said.

Setbacks like illness and unemployme­nt — or pandemics — can also dunk households straight back into hardship.

“The eliminatio­n of poverty at a point in time does not eliminate poverty,” Sicular said.

 ?? Beiyi Seow — AFP photos ?? Liu walking to his orange orchard in Baojing County, in central China’s Hunan province.
Beiyi Seow — AFP photos Liu walking to his orange orchard in Baojing County, in central China’s Hunan province.
 ??  ?? People taking pictures at an orange orchard in Baojing County, in central China’s Hunan province.
People taking pictures at an orange orchard in Baojing County, in central China’s Hunan province.
 ??  ?? Xiuli with crates of oranges at her warehouse in Baojing county, in central China’s Hunan province.
Xiuli with crates of oranges at her warehouse in Baojing county, in central China’s Hunan province.
 ??  ?? Liu at his residence in Baojing County, in central China’s Hunan province.
Liu at his residence in Baojing County, in central China’s Hunan province.

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