China will continue to suffer a large income disparity between
rural and urban areas this year, according to a blueprint of the
Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.
The per capita income in rural areas will reach about 3,500 yuan
(US$415) this year, an increase of more than 5 per cent over last
year, the blueprint said.
However, the growth rate is lower than that in 2005, which saw a
6.2 percent increase over 2004, according to the blueprint, while
the per capita income in urban areas grew by 9.6 percent in 2005
over the previous year.
The China Daily quoted Monday an expert as saying that the
widening income gap between rural and urban areas will continue
this year and farmers' consumption capability will remain low.
The low wages of migrant workers and the relatively low price of
agricultural products were to blame for the widening income gap,
according to Ma Xiaohe, deputy director of the Academy of
Macroeconomic Research with the State Development and Reform
Commission.
In China, the wages of farmer-turned laborers serve as an
important income source for rural families, which, however, have
been slow to increase compared with the rapid rise in urban wages
over the past few years.
"The slower increase of wages for migrant workers, to a large
extent, hinders rural families' income growth," Ma was quoted as
saying.
About 40 percent of farmer-turned laborers earn an average
monthly wage of about 500-800 yuan (US$62-100), according to a
recent survey conducted by the Research Office of the State
Council.
To boost the rural development, China has launched a new drive
to build a 'new socialist countryside' during the 11th Five-Year
Guidelines period (2006-2010).
The central government will allocate a budget expenditure of
339.7 billion yuan (US$42 billion) this year for the building of
'new socialist countryside', 42.2 billion yuan (US$5.2 billion)
more than last year.
Ma said that farmers' income will continue to grow this year,
spurred by the new drive.
(Xinhua News Agency April 18, 2006)
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