The Chinese government will further encourage more
farmers to set up economic cooperatives, according to a government
official.
Chinese Vice Minister of Agriculture Yin Chengjie
recently told 50 Chinese mayors at a seminar that the ministry will
offer more training and guidance to farmers in the coming years to
encourage more farmers join economic cooperatives.
Yin said the cooperatives have become an important
link between farmers and the market, which is vital if China is to
boost modern agriculture and build a new socialist
countryside.
According to ministry statistics, the 23 million
members enrolled in the country's 150,000 economic cooperatives now
account for 9.8 percent of the total rural households. These
economic cooperatives have also benefited 32.45 million non-member
households.
Statistics show that the economic cooperatives can
bring an average increase of 500 yuan in annual income for each of
their members. Last year the average income of China's farmers only
increased by 300 yuan.
Development of these cooperatives is a key element of
the country's drive to build a new socialist countryside, which is
one of the government's priorities.
Yin recognized that the government needs to create a
more favorable environment for the development of farmers'
cooperatives. He called for a new law on farmers' cooperatives to
be issued and put into operation as soon as possible.
A draft law on farmers' professional cooperatives has
been submitted to the Standing Committee of the National People's
Congress (NPC), or China's legislature, for the first
deliberation on June 24, which will improve farmers' legal
rights.
(Xinhua News Agency July 12, 2006)
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