Rural Poverty: China Sets Eradication Target For 2020

Some 860 million people were brought out of poverty between 1981 and 2011.

 

In 1971, over 88 per cent of Chinese lived on less than a Dollar (600 FCFA) a day. Today, less than 2 per cent (about 140 million people) of the population of 1.4 Billion is considered as being poor. In the past three decades since China opened up to the world, government has embarked on targeted poverty eradication efforts that have borne palpable fruit. As from 2011, Chinese living below the poverty line were those who earned less than 2,106 Yuan (about 187,757 FCFA) a year or 1.9 US Dollars (1,169 FCFA) a day.

According to Wang Sangui, Director of the China Anti-Poverty Research Institute at the Renmin University of China in Beijing, large-scale poverty alleviation in China greatly contributed to fulfilling Millennium Development Goals. Poverty fell from 60 per cent in 1990 to 4.2 per cent in 2014. “China became the first country in the world to halve the incidence of poverty by 2015,” he notes. Official estimations show that consumption poverty decreased over the past three decades from 884 million people in 1981 to 25 million people in 2011. Thus, 860 million people were brought out of poverty. Meanwhile, China has set 2020 as the target to get the remaining 2 per cent of the population (140 million people) out of rural poverty.

On the other hand, banks have in the past five years provided 3 Trillion Yuan (about 267,490 Billion FCFA) for poverty reduction, explains the Professor of Agricultural Economics and Rural Development, who is also a member of the Consultation Committee of the Leading Group for Poverty Alleviation and Development. “All this has sign...

Reactions

Commentaires

    List is empty.

Laissez un Commentaire

De la meme catégorie