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China’s Human Development Report 2005 is the first
comprehensive study to offer a set of bold and practical policy recommendations
to improve conditions for the rural poor, and bolster education, health care
and the social security system.
16 December 2005 Beijing, China - "This report is particularly
timely as the Government is shaping its new economic blueprint to ease the strains
of inequality. " -Khalid Malik, UNDP Resident Representative/UN Resident
Coordinator in China
China’s wealth gap between urban and rural communities
is among the highest in the world, but according to a United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) report released today, the government is coming to grips with
the widening disparities that threaten the country’s stability. China’s
Human Development Report 2005 is the first comprehensive study to offer a set
of bold and practical policy recommendations to improve conditions for the rural
poor, and bolster education, health care and the social security system.
China succeeded in lifting 250 million people out of poverty
over the past 25 years. However, during the same period income inequality has
doubled. A person living in a city earns on average $1000 a year, compared to
just over $300 in the countryside. An urban citizen can also expect to live
over 5 years longer than a farmer. In Tibet, only half of the population can
read and write while over 97 percent Chinese living in Beijing, Shanghai or
Tianjin are literate. At national level, illiteracy rate for women is more than
double that of men.
“The Chinese Government has realized the grave consequences
of social inequity, and has started to tackle the problem head-on,” says
Khalid Malik, UNDP Resident Representative and UN Resident Coordinator. “This
report is particularly timely as the Government is shaping its new economic
blueprint to ease the strains of inequality. There is no question that more
can be done to mind the gap that so often triggers social unrest when economic
growth on a national scale leaves the poor and the disadvantaged behind”.
The Government is already taking concrete steps to address
these human development inequities. By the end of this year, it will have completely
abolished agriculture taxes across the country. To improve literacy rates in
rural communities, the government is promoting compulsory education for the
rural poor through renovation of primary and middle schools and providing free
textbooks for 24 million students from poor families.
“Inequity is evident and concrete action should be taken
immediately to help those at the bottom of the economic and social ladder,”
said Li Shi, lead author of the report. Among the key recommendations, the authors
propose:
Creating equal jobs opportunities for all
The report recommends an inclusive social security and pension
insurance system to guarantee a social safety net for every worker in the country.
This will require a reform of the household registration system (hukou) to ensure
equal rights to workers migrating to the cities. This is a critical step to
improve labour rights, particularly for the 150 million migrant workers.
China also sees a growing demand for household services among
elderly people, as the country‘s aging and growing population will reach
1.6 billion by 2030. The report highlights the opportunity for job creation
through informal employment to serve the needs of the expanding population.
The study also calls on further financial reforms to encourage
more people to set up their own businesses, and recommends small loans for Chinese
entrepreneurs to open small enterprises. The number of employees of state-owned
or collective-owned enterprises has been decreasing through self-employment
or informal employment. Small loan services can boost this trend.
Investing in basic health services for the rural poor
A farmer living in Guizhou or Yunnan can expect to live until
the age of 65 while an individual in Hainan or Jiangsu can live to 74.
The authors highlight the need for sufficient preventive health
care, health education, planned immunization, and control of serious infectious
and endemic diseases. Only 15% of rural residents had medical insurance in 2004,
whereas half of urban population benefited from full insurance.
The Government is responding to the challenge. This year, over
150 million farmers are part of a pilot cooperative medical system in rural
areas to guarantee basic medical insurance for all. This new cooperative medical
is funded with financial aid from central and local budgets and voluntary funds
raised by the farmers themselves. Over 70 million people have benefited from
the new health policies and had their medical fees reimbursed.
Make primary education top priority
Less than 1.5 percent of Tibetan children go to junior high
while more than 60 percent of children in Beijing, Shanghai or Tianjin pursue
their secondary education. This calls for more investment and legislation in
public education to ensure compulsory primary education.
The report warns against the serious imbalances between primary
and higher education in China. Efforts must be made to give top priority to
primary education. The Government set the target of accessible high quality
primary education, particularly for the rural population. Currently, this policy
is being applied in the poverty stricken rural areas in middle and western China
and continued efforts are being made to improve primary and middle schools.
The authors highlight that improving the educational level
of farmers plays an important role in raising their skill levels and ultimately
their incomes. To make the curriculum and the education system more relevant
to the demands of the labour market, the study recommends the establishment
of community universities for vocational training to disadvantage groups and
enterprise training.
Source: United
Nations Development Programme: China
ABOUT THE REPORT: Since UNDP produced the first global
Human Development Report (HDR) in 1990, HDRs have emerged as its flagship publications
and one of UNDP’s most important policy analysis and advocacy tools. China
has since 1997 produced three National Human Development Reports (NHDRs). Unlike
the previous reports, which were written by foreign experts and institutions,
this fourth “China Human Development Report” was written by a Chinese
team of experts organized and coordinated by China Development Research Foundation.
These NHDR exercises have proved to be successful and worthwhile, playing a
unique role in UNDP’s endeavour to influence China’s development
policy making. Over the years, China’s NHDRs have also become useful reference
books for the academia and UNDP China’s development partners worldwide.
It is gradually evolving into one of the principal instruments for the office
to work together with Chinese national think tanks, policy makers and development
researchers.
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help people build a better life. |