With a financial input of 7.2 billion yuan (around US$900
million) in 2005, a government-sponsored program aided millions of
poor rural households by exempting them from school tuition,
incidental fees and providing boarding subsidies to their kids.
Wang Xuming, spokesman with China's Ministry of Education, said
on Tuesday that the fund enabled 34 million primary and junior
middle school students in the central and western rural areas to
get free textbooks, and over 31 million were exempted from
incidental fees, each accounting about 30 percent of the total.
With the program, poor kids in rural elementary schools each
enjoyed a 210-yuan cut in tuition and incidental fees on average
every year, and those in junior middle schools could enjoy a cut of
320 yuan, Wang said, adding that boarders could get a subsidy of
200 to 300 yuan.
"The program helped 350,000 drop-outs in the regions go back to
schools in 2005," Wang said.
Soaring education fees have left many kids from poor families in
China's outlying western regions out of schools.
China has decided to invest 218.2 billion yuan (US$27 billion)
in rural education to ensure that every child in rural and poor
areas can enjoy a nine-year compulsory education.
From this spring semester, China has exempted primary and junior
middle school students in poor western part of the country from
school tuition fees and incidental charges. And all rural students
will enjoy the free nine-year compulsory education by the end of
next year.
(Xinhua News Agency April 26, 2006)
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