Premier Wen Jiabao urged the formalization of the experimental
reform of directly subsidizing farmers at a State Council meeting
last week.
The high-profile call from the premier sets the scene for the next
stage of rural reform concerning farm subsidies.
Price subsidy used to be the major form of subsidies for farmers.
To protect farmers' enthusiasm to farm, the government ordered
State-owned grain purchasing firms to procure farmers' grain at a
"protective price."
The policy was well-intentioned. In reality, however, many farmers
cannot sell their grain at the pre-set price due to the
sluggishness of the market and failure of grain purchasers to fully
implement the policy.
Economists from both home and abroad have concluded that only a
small part -- one- quarter in some cases -- of such indirect
subsidies actually goes to the farmers.
The low efficiency of the old practice propelled the government to
kickstart an experiment to directly subsidize farmers in some
regions last year.
Initial results have been encouraging. Subsidies are transferred
from the circulation links to farmers, who have seen an extra
increase in their income.
In
Northeast China's Jilin Province, for example, farmers' income may
grow by 6 per cent as a result, according to the province's
agricultural affairs commission.
Direct subsidy policy can foster an orderly market since it does
not intervene into the pricing mechanism of the market or farmers'
production process. The intervention will distort agricultural
trade.
This abides by the World Trade Organization "green box" policies,
namely, those that are not trade distorting.
However, it is not an export-oriented policy. The major
significance lies in its role in domestic agricultural
restructuring.
With the price subsidy in place, farmers are blocked from the real
supply/demand market conditions.
If
the market is open to them, they can adjust more promptly their
production to accommodate market demand, which will enhance the
competitiveness of their products.
Given the preliminary results of the experiment reforms and the
envisioned benefits for farmers, the central government is poised
to push the reform plan across the country.
Against the backdrop of farmers' slow income growth and the
country's sliding grain output, the policy is a good choice in
every sense.
The primary task facing the government is to devise feasible
implementation procedures -- whether through deducting agricultural
taxes or directly giving cash to farmers -- to ensure that the
policy is a success.
(China Daily November 5, 2003)
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