The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has planned average
lending of US$1.5 billion per year to China for the next two years
to be spread more evenly across different sectors.
According to its updated strategy and program for the
country, the ADB will maintain its focus on projects for the poorer
central and western provinces.
The proportion of loans to agriculture and natural
resources projects will more than double from 10 to 25 percent, and
the social infrastructure sector's share will rise from 10 to 23
percent, compared with the lending program for 2004-2006, the bank
said in a statement.
It said transportation, a sector that has historically
received the bulk of ADB loans, would receive 41 percent, down from
59 percent last year. The remaining 11 percent would go to energy
projects.
"The ADB's future operations in the PRC will emphasize
rural development, environment, energy conservation, urban
development, and regional cooperation, in line with the country's
11th Five-Year Program for 2006-2010," said Toru Shibuichi, ADB
country director for China.
"ADB will mobilize resources and develop new
instruments to meet the demand for more balanced development among
China's regions, and between the country's rural and urban
areas."
The bank said China had made remarkable progress in
reducing poverty, with the number of rural poor falling from about
250 million in 1978 to about 23.7 million last year. "More targeted
and innovative approaches, however, are needed to work on pockets
of persistent absolute poverty, the vulnerability of a large
population living on the brink of poverty, and new manifestations
of urban poverty."
While China was poised to achieve Millennium
Development Goal (MDG) targets for maternal health and primary
education, dramatic improvements were needed to meet the targets
for gender equity, environmental sustainability, child mortality,
HIV/AIDS, and access to safe drinking water and
sanitation.
The bank said US$23.6 million in technical assistance
grants was planned over the next two years for policy and
institutional reforms, legal reforms and governance, training, and
project preparation.
As of the end of last year, ADB had approved US$16.24
billion for 115 loans and US$257.1 million for 483 technical
assistance grants to China.
"The ADB's portfolio in the PRC continues to be one of
the ADB's best, with no projects marked 'at risk' in recent years,"
said the bank.
(Xinhua News Agency September 21, 2006)
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