Will rural residents become middle-class?
Updated: 2013-01-17 10:49
(Xinhua)
|
||||||||
CHANGCHUN - Wang Zhiren, a farmer in the agricultural province of Jilin, does not know what the word "middle-class" means. However, Wang's life is typically middle-class: he lives in a three-bedroom house with a garage, drives a sedan and shops in urban department stores.
Wang's family earned 100,000 yuan ($16,090) last year from growing rice on dozens of hectares of land in northeast China.
|
A farmer works in the field in Chengdu, Sichuan province, Dec 4 2012. [Photo/Xinhua] |
Many hope that emerging rural consumers, such as Wang, will unleash their purchasing power like urbanites did during the last decade, as China is in urgent need of shifting its economic driving force from investment to consumption.
The income gap between urban and rural residents narrowed in the past few years, bringing down the urban-rural earning ratio to 3.13 in 2011 from the 2009 reading of 3.33.
Twenty-nine out of 31 provincial-level governments said income growth of their rural residents surpassed that of urban dwellers for the January-September period last year, official data showed.
China held its annual Central Rural Work Conference in December, one month after the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) elected its new leadership.
Agriculture Minister Han Changfu told Xinhua that the conference pledged to put more efforts in boosting farmers' earnings in the "income doubling program" promised during the 18th CPC national congress.
The five-yearly congress adopted a resolution saying by 2020, the country's per capita income should be double that of 2010.
While the exemption of agricultural taxation and increasing government investment have pushed forward the rural economy for the past several years, countryside residents still face great difficulty in maintaining fast income growth momentum.
Related Readings
China eyes more rural development in 2013
China's farmer cooperatives fatten rural wallets
China eyes more rural development in 2013
China to have 600m middle-class by 2020
Middle class key to consumption
- Li Na on Time cover, makes influential 100 list
- FBI releases photos of 2 Boston bombings suspects
- World's wackiest hairstyles
- Sandstorms strike Northwest China
- Never-seen photos of Madonna on display
- H7N9 outbreak linked to waterfowl migration
- Dozens feared dead in Texas plant blast
- Venezuelan court rules out manual votes counting
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
American abroad |
Industry savior: Big boys' toys |
New commissioner
|
Liaoning: China's oceangoing giant |
TCM - Keeping healthy in Chinese way |
Poultry industry under pressure |
Today's Top News
Boston bombing suspect reported cornered on boat
7.0-magnitude quake hits Sichuan
Cross-talk artist helps to spread the word
'Green' awareness levels drop in Beijing
Palace Museum spruces up
First couple on Time's list of most influential
H7N9 flu transmission studied
Trading channels 'need to broaden'
US Weekly
Beyond Yao
|
Money power |