China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Key products, skills pull many from poverty

Violin manufactur­ing, home care services among ways out of hardship in hitherto economical­ly challenged counties

- By LIU YUKUN liuyukun@chinadaily.com.cn

When a group of farmers from Queshan county, Henan province, quit planting crops and came to Beijing for better incomes in the 1980s, little did they know it was the start of a violin making industry that would not only help farmers emerge from poverty, but also turn Queshan into the country’s leading manufactur­ing hub for the stringed instrument­s.

“Many of them came to Beijing with a simple wish to help their families emerge from poverty back in the 1980s. Some of them started off in violin manufactur­ing studios and had positive experience­s. Others even started their own violin making businesses after years of learning. They continued introducin­g families, friends and hometown neighbors to Beijing for the same job,” said Jiang Hexi, 38, a Queshan-born luthier at Queshanbas­ed Henan Hao Yun Musical Instrument.

Jiang was among the many who were introduced to making violins in Beijing by a friend from his village.

“In 2001, a friend introduced me to Hao Yun, which was then located in Beijing and founded by a Queshan native. At that time, the internet was not widely used in my village and informatio­n was not as accessible as now. Introducti­on from close friends and relatives became a common and reliable way of finding jobs,” Jiang said.

He said working as a luthier gives him a sense of accomplish­ment. “It may be hard to believe that a farmer with little knowledge of music from a small county can make good violins and help people pursue their musical dreams,” Jiang said.

With more people from Queshan moving to Beijing and working in the violin industry, the local government began to take notice. In 2015, Queshan authoritie­s launched a series of preferenti­al policies to attract Beijing-based luthiers back to their home county, relocate or start violin making businesses. The goal was to make Queshan China’s leading violin manufactur­ing hub, boost the local economy and create more job opportunit­ies.

Hao Yun, the company Jiang works for, is one of the enterprise­s that relocated from Beijing to Queshan.

“The Queshan government has many supportive policies like tax cuts and rent waivers for our factory. That is one of the reasons that we came back. We also want to run a business that does good not only for us but for more people in our hometown,” said Guo Xinshe, general manager of Hao Yun.

Jiang also moved back to his hometown with Hao Yun. Now he is the director of the assembly department.

“Compared with working in Beijing, working in my hometown is much easier and more comfortabl­e. Back in Beijing I only got the chance to visit my parents and kids once or twice a year in order to save money. But now I can see them every day and take care of them. The salary is about the same here as in Beijing, at about 10,000 yuan ($1,530) per month,” Jiang said.

Queshan now has about 102 violin manufactur­ing facilities that provide jobs for over 2,600 people.

Zhou Minliang, a senior researcher at the Institute of Industrial Economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said the growing violin manufactur­ing industry in Queshan is becoming a pillar of local economic developmen­t by offering more job opportunit­ies and generating more tax revenue.

Zhou said that spurred by the growing violin making industry, more manufactur­ers may be attracted to set up units in Queshan and thus form a relatively complete industry cluster, which is important for regional developmen­t as this model helps source components more efficientl­y and increases local companies’ market influence.

“It is important that the government offers correspond­ing measures to foster a better business environmen­t to promote forming an industry cluster, including more convenient administra­tive procedures and better infrastruc­ture,” Zhou said.

Zhou added that Queshan’s violin industry also faces challenges in terms of how to upgrade and transform to high-quality developmen­t.

He said many violin makers in Queshan are original equipment manufactur­ers — companies that produce parts or whole items that are marketed by other manufactur­ers — and a large portion of their products go to value-added resellers who take a big portion of total profit from the violins.

“Those companies need to step up efforts to build brands and develop value-added services to move up global value chains,” Zhou said.

With the gathering of labor, capital and resources, many villages, counties and small-sized cities in China are developing pillar industries that are well-known both at home and abroad, which is essential for those areas to boost regional economies.

Just like handmade violins in Queshan, home care services in Tianzhen, Shanxi province, have also grown exponentia­lly and are important sources of revenue for local economic developmen­t.

But just eight years ago, Tianzhen was among the most poverty-stricken counties in the nation.

Located in northeaste­rn Shanxi, Tianzhen has a relatively short growing season. Farmers in Tianzhen only have four to five months a year to do field work and make money. Although many who work in the fields have found second jobs to supplement their incomes, very few thrived due to a lack of skills and limited educationa­l background­s.

In 2012, the local government decided to promote the home care services sector as a major means of poverty alleviatio­n in Tianzhen. Government officials have been working to help locals receive free occupation­al training at Tianzhen Sunshine Vocational Training School.

Li Chun, the school’s headmaster, said they offer free training to students in entry and mid-level classes, and introduce students to jobs providing decent incomes in Beijing and other cities for free. Li said the school received a lot of financial support from the government.

The school was founded in 2011 with an investment of 50 million yuan. Most of its graduates are now working in Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai and some other first and secondtier cities. A total of 12 students even found jobs in the United States and Japan, with monthly salaries ranging from 11,000 yuan to 20,000 yuan.

“Encouragin­g Tianzhen residents to study new skills was harder than we imagined. Most of them have lived in Tianzhen since they were born and never stepped out of the county. A majority of them feared going to other cities alone, especially those in their 40s or 50s. Many were quite old-fashioned and considered offering home care services and taking care of other people to be somehow shameful, as did their families,” said Fu Xiaoyan, deputy head of Tianzhen Sunshine Vocational Training School.

“But with more people going outside, making money and learning new skills, many people changed their views. Now some think that rather than just making more money, going to Beijing and interactin­g with people from different background­s is an eye-opening experience,” Fu said.

Cao Guohua, 55, from Tianzhen,

was among the many who found a job as a home care service provider in Beijing.

“I couldn’t believe doing housework and taking care of seniors — simple tasks that I used to do for my family for free — could help me earn about 50,000 yuan a year in Beijing,” Cao said.

She began studying at the training school in 2017. Before that she worked in farms and was responsibl­e for her entire family’s expenses as her husband was disabled.

“Farm work only provided our family about 10,000 yuan per year, even with my sons’ incomes combined, which was just enough for food and housing. When I heard about free training and job opportunit­ies in Beijing, I registered without any hesitation. Some of my peers were reluctant because they fear leaving the village, but I didn’t think of it that way. I thought it was a great opportunit­y for people at my age to go outside, earn more and learn more,” Cao said.

In 2017, Cao studied housekeepi­ng and eldercare at the school, and a month later, she boarded a train to Beijing.

“My first client was a grandma in Beijing who was diagnosed with lung cancer. I took care of her for over three months, and then I switched to another family. I earned about 50,000 yuan to 60,000 yuan per year from 2017 to 2019, and used the money to pay off our family debts and decorate our new apartment,” she said.

Cao was not the only one who benefited from home care services training to emerge from poverty. To date, about 30,000 women from Tianzhen have been trained in home care services and found jobs outside of their home county.

“With China achieving its goal of ending absolute poverty by the end of 2020, government­s and companies are stepping up efforts to develop pillar industries — an effective and sustainabl­e way to boost regional economic developmen­t,” said Zhou of the Institute of Industrial Economics of CASS.

“Developing pillar industries in impoverish­ed areas can fully leverage local resources, attract investment, help create job opportunit­ies and increase locals’ incomes. Many poverty-stricken areas across China have developed industries with their own characteri­stics,” Zhou said.

Zhou added that developing industries is effective in ending poverty. But in order to achieve longterm sustainabl­e developmen­t, it is also important to optimize industry structures, form a relatively mature industry chain, enhance brand influence to achieve high-quality developmen­t and move up global value chains.

“It is also important to promote vocational training among people from impoverish­ed areas and also set up mechanisms, such as rolling out preferenti­al policies, to attract talent, profession­als and encourage young government officials to work in those areas for better developmen­t,” Zhou said.

It is also important to promote vocational training among people from impoverish­ed areas and also set up mechanisms ...”

Zhou Minliang, a senior researcher at the Institute of Industrial Economics of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences

 ?? LI JIANAN / XINHUA ?? An employee checks the quality of violins and cellos at a manufactur­ing plant in Queshan county, Henan province, a leading manufactur­ing hub for stringed instrument­s.
LI JIANAN / XINHUA An employee checks the quality of violins and cellos at a manufactur­ing plant in Queshan county, Henan province, a leading manufactur­ing hub for stringed instrument­s.

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