An executive meeting held Wednesday in Beijing by the State
Council, China's cabinet, agreed to fully liberalize the grain
purchasing market in 2004 and passed a draft regulation on grain
circulation management.
The meeting, chaired by Premier Wen Jiabao, held that conditions
for further reform on grain circulation systems are mature with the
deepening marketization of the economy.
The liberalization of the grain purchasing market should be carried
out stably and actively, and a unified, open, competitive and
orderly grain market system should be established, according to the
meeting.
The meeting called for direct subsidies to farmers so as to protect
the interests of those growing grains, as well as further reform on
state-owned grain enterprises, which used to maintain a monopoly
over grain markets.
The Chinese government has announced this year that licensed grain
trading companies may purchase grain at market-driven prices after
new grain comes into market, but minimum purchasing prices of some
varieties of rice are set for protecting the interests of rice
growers and spurring rice production.
The meeting also underscored the importance of canceling
agricultural taxes in five years to alleviate burdens on farmers,
and passed draft regulations on license management for dangerous
solid waste use.
(People’s Daily May 21, 2004)
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