男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影
US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Business / Economy

Urbanization should provide new opportunities to farmers

By LI YANG (China Daily) Updated: 2014-04-03 15:03

Villages prevailed in the Communist Party of China's revolutionary discourse until the latter won the civil war over the Kuomintang by mobilizing poor farmers to besiege cities in 1949, when 90 percent of China's 500 million population was rural.

The crux of the agricultural country's urbanization today also lies in the villages. Farmers now want to enter cities after being fended off for a long time.

Urbanization should provide new opportunities to farmers

Urbanization should provide new opportunities to farmers

By the end of 2011, more people lived in urban areas than in rural areas in China for the first time in the agricultural nation's 5,000 years of civilized history.

This period, especially after the "cultural revolution" (1966-76) ended, witnessed the largest, if not the most persistent, population transfer in human history within one country.

More than 200 million working-age farmers and their 70 million families have elbowed their way into cities by undertaking the least desirable jobs.

Migrant workers, who were called tramps in cities during the planned economy, are blamed for the causes of "urban maladies", while their contribution to the economy as laborers and consumers is selectively ignored.

Their odyssey is only half complete. Urban migration is far from being recognized by the government or accepted by the metropolitan class.

Fifty-three percent of Chinese live in cities now. One-third of them are migrant workers, who are denied citizen welfare rights.

The average urban pension is 20 times higher than it is in rural areas. The average personal income of Chinese farmers is less than $4 a day, one-third of their urban counterparts.

The eye-opening experiences in cities and the human impulse to pursue a better quality of life drastically change migrant workers' expectations of the government.

The first generation of migrant workers, in their early 60s today, are mostly satisfied by becoming the first person to enter a city from a village. Their sons' dreams are to bring back home as much money as possible. Their grandsons, born in the 1990s, who do not know how to go about farmwork, do not want to return to the villages anymore.

The inner tension of such divided cities is currently sizzling as large patches of farmland are turned into cities.

To some extent, abolishing the agriculture tax for farmers in 2006 and extending to the farmers the basic pension and medical care insurance network in 2009 is helping to ease the tension.

But land and hukou (registration right) remain the obstacles that cannot be bypassed in the government's pursuit of so-called new urbanization.

Paradoxically, the government had used the two factors to concentrate the war-torn nation's limited resources in its cities and urban dwellers before, on the back of the farmers' enforced sacrifice of their rightful interests.

Former fortifications become current restraints hindering the free flow of production factors.

A similar vexing dilemma is the relationship between economic growth and urbanization. The history of developed countries proves the latter is a result of the first.

In history, Chinese cities came about on fertile farmland along big rivers, grew with innovation and the convenience of transportation, prospered from openness and free trade and withered in seclusion and rigidity. China's urbanization rate, which rose from 20 percent to more than 50 percent in the past 30 years, is also a natural result of China's market reform.

But many local governments believe it works the other way around as well, with urbanization as the new consumption and investment engines of economic growth.

Putting the horse before the cart is the first thing the Chinese government should bear in mind in balancing urbanization and growth.

Otherwise, a simple land urbanization driven by the government's pursuit for growth will only move the villages into cities.

 

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...
...
主站蜘蛛池模板: 浦东新区| 阿尔山市| 和顺县| 竹北市| 沙坪坝区| 武隆县| 盐源县| 营口市| 滦南县| 谷城县| 宿州市| 平潭县| 凤台县| 铅山县| 合肥市| 昌宁县| 九寨沟县| 永城市| 神木县| 新绛县| 万载县| 井冈山市| 京山县| 宁化县| 临潭县| 陆川县| 金乡县| 汪清县| 东丰县| 墨竹工卡县| 彰化县| 广州市| 龙山县| 攀枝花市| 新巴尔虎右旗| 壶关县| 辽源市| 东平县| 博野县| 敦化市| 明光市| 青岛市| 德州市| 英吉沙县| 沙坪坝区| 和龙市| 两当县| 密山市| 泰宁县| 利津县| 来凤县| 勐海县| 镇沅| 苏尼特左旗| 新宁县| 郸城县| 宁明县| 稻城县| 永康市| 鄂尔多斯市| 梁河县| 诸城市| 射洪县| 吐鲁番市| 长沙县| 外汇| 朝阳市| 常德市| 嘉黎县| 荥经县| 康马县| 桑日县| 武汉市| 磐石市| 离岛区| 邳州市| 兴隆县| 新田县| 清原| 九龙城区| 汝阳县| 大足县|