A report by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
(CASS) shows that China's worrisome income gap is showing no signs
of narrowing despite government efforts to bridge it.
China's income disparity is
close to that of Latin America's, says the CASS report which
investigated 7,140 households.
Growing at double-digit rates China's economy has
become the world's fourth largest, yet it is grappling with the
disparity between the haves and have-nots, which has widened
dramatically over the past 20 years.
The richest 10 percent of Chinese families now own
more than 40 percent of all private assets, while the poorest 10
percent share less than two percent of the total wealth.
In 2005, the average annual per-capita income of urban
residents in Beijing was 17,653 yuan (US$2,263) while people in
China's Qinghai Province earned an average of only 8,057 yuan
(US$1,033) a year, government statistics show.
The gap between urban and rural residents is even
larger. Farmers in Qinghai reported an average annual per capita
income of 2,165 yuan (US$277) in 2005, just 25 percent of what
local urban residents earned.
Increasing medical costs have become the biggest
burden facing Chinese people. The report shows that 11.8 percent of
the household expenditures go to health care, higher than
communications and education.
According to a recent survey jointly conducted by the
China Youth Daily and
Sina.com.cn, nearly 90 percent of Chinese people are alarmed by the
gap between the haves and the have-nots.
About 80.7 percent said it was time to correct the
imbalances, while only 14.1 percent believed "there is no need to
change."
China's government has made
narrowing the income gap one of its top priorities and a corner
stone to building a harmonious society.
China's Gini Coefficient, an
indicator of income disparity, has reached 0.496, according to the
report carried by Elite Reference, a weekly newspaper run by the China Youth
Daily.
The Gini Coefficient uses zero to indicate equal
income distribution while one represents the largest income
disparity.
According the World Bank, China's Gini Coefficient was
0.45 in 2005. The index in India is 0.33, the United States 0.41
and Brazil 0.54.
(Xinhua News Agency January 8, 2007)
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