The government has pledged to help boost the country's grain
production capacity and increase farmers' income amid falling wheat
output.
The promise was made during a State Council conference chaired by
Premier Wen Jiabao yesterday.
The country's wheat output dropped for the fourth consecutive year
to its lowest level since the mid-1980s, according to a report from
the State Cereal and Oil Information Center issued early this
month.
The report said that by the end of this year's harvest, China's
wheat output will have reached only 86 million tons, a year-on-year
drop of 5 percent.
The information center attributed the reduction in wheat output to
the shrinking cropping area. Only 22 million hectares were planted
with grain this year, the smallest area since 1950, and 7.9 percent
down from 2002.
The conference concluded that governments at various levels must do
more to support major grain producing areas and allow farmers to
take the initiative.
They should also inject more into agriculture and improve farming
infrastructure.
The conference highlighted the importance of improving the
industry's structure. Participants at the meeting said the solution
lay in expanding the production capacity of major grain areas,
rather than simply decreasing the planted area of grain.
(China Daily October 22, 2003)
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