China will invest a further 218.2 billion yuan (US$27.28
billion) in rural education in the 2006-2010 period, according to
the Ministry of Finance.
The money will be allocated from central and local budgets,
according to the ministry on Tuesday.
Educational investment in rural areas will total 223.5 billion yuan
this year, a rise of 39.5 billion yuan year on year, said Premier
Wen Jiabao while delivering a government work report at the
on-going session of the National People's Congress, the top
legislature of China.
Wen said 10 billion yuan will be allocated from the central budget
to rebuild rural middle schools. Local governments will allocate
support funds for the program.
China is working to establish a mechanism that guarantees
compulsory rural education funding. The mechanism is designed to
ensure that the cost of rural education is covered by central and
local finances.
Last year China exempted students in rural areas of western China
from tuition and miscellaneous fees related to nine-year compulsory
education. The exemptions will be expanded to central and eastern
regions this year.
The move will relieve the financial burden on 150 million rural
households with school-age children, who make up nearly 80 percent
of the country's primary and junior middle school students.
(Xinhua News Agency March 7, 2007)
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