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2 key sessions focus on harmony, environment
(chinadaily.com.cn/agencies)
Updated: 2007-03-03 16:16
China, led by charismatic leaders including President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, is vowing to build up what they call a harmonious society, amid an unprecedented economic boom in human history, that has seen record years of double-digit economic growth, but at the same time brought income disparity and air and water pollution, that is affecting the health of many in the country. It is reported that the State Council, the cabinet led by Wen, will begin this year to institute a new policy in which the government will provide "minimum living allowance" to all rural farming households, whose monthly income falls below a government-set level. Some reports even say the government is considering funding a universal medical insurance scheme to cover China's 800 million farmers. During the NPC session in 2005, Wen announced to cancel the agriculture tax, officially ending a 2,000-year Chinese practice, a move welcomed by the farmers. During the 2006 session, Wen declared the governmet would fund rural children education from Grade 1 to Grade 9. "All government departments must be highly attentive to the problems concerning the people's daily lives," the Xinhua news agency cited Wen as saying last month as he prepared the report. "The government must improve social welfare work and ensure the basic necessities for people in poverty." The parliament is expected to pass a long-awaited property law offering equal protection for the public and private sector, and another that will utilize the corporate income tax, bringing foreign-invested enterprises in same line with domestic firms at a unified 25 percent rate. Wen is also expected to set an economic growth target for this year of "about eight percent", government officials that have helped prepare the report said. Similar targets have been exceeded in the past but the officials said Wen would outline more forceful measures including possible structural reforms this year to rein in excessive growth. "Efforts should be made to restructure the economy and change the economic growth pattern, enhance energy efficiency and environmental protection," Wen said in comments reported in the press. |