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In China, Leaders Turn Focus to Farmers' Plight

Wall Street Journal Original article ›

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Chinese leaders at annual policy meeting turn to issues facing nation's 730 millon farmers, as urban outcomes year after year far outpace growth of rural incomes. See graph. Urban incomes have shot up just as rural incomes remain sluggish as the country has focused on rapid industrialization, rapid urbanization and an export driven manufacturing economy for two decades with some success because of the focused effort. But this focused effort is dependent on the ability of Western Europe and the USA as well as other countries sucking in cheaper Chinese manufactured goods. This ability of the western countries to absorb Chinese manufactured goods at an astonishing rate is now called into question, and maybe permanently impaired after years of out of control consumption and spending and easy credit with the impact of the credit and housing crisis. As one of the aspects of this focused effort was to make enough rapid progress in industry and urbanization that it could stay ahead of the problems facing the rural areas and farmers, the new situation in western countries and China's lowered growth rate with lower exports, calls for new thinking on how to address the problems facing the rural areas and farmers. Part of the problem is that farmers do not own land in China. The government owns all the land and China's farmers only have 30 year leases on the land and technically that land cannot be sold though it can be transferred. A related aspect to this is that farms though having 50% more productivity than in 1980 are still small by western standards and it takes a lot of land to feed the growing needs of a more affluent urban population. The typical Chinese farm is 1.5 acres compared to 15 acres in Hungary and Poland and 432 acres in the USA. Obviously the US farms are huge and China does not have the vast acreages of land compared to the people, but larger farms would enable the kind of improvements posible on larger farms to raise productivity. Ways have to be found to increase farmers incomes and to enable farmers to move to urban areas which means creating more jobs. This will have to be done in the context of a domestic led growth and trade with other Asian countries as the export drive and export industries shipping products to western countries see their growth fall.

China's policy actions to address impact of global financial crisis 2008-2012

08/14/2008

Policy actions taken by China to address the global economic crisis's impact on Chinese growth rate including land policy for farmers and export rebates.

Grouped Articles

Trade Losses Rise in China, Threatening Jobs

New York Times 01/14/2009

Global Trade Posts Sharp Decline

Wall Street Journal 01/14/2009

Surplus to requirements

Economist 01/15/2009

Tax Cut Spurs 25% Rise in Chinese Auto Sales

Wall Street Journal 03/11/2009

China's Economic Torch Won't Outlast Olympics

BusinessWeek 08/14/2008

Melting Pot Meets Great Wall

New York Times 08/24/2008


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