|
China’s poor getting more dispersed: WB
Beijing(China)—As China’s
roaring economy runs ahead at breakneck speed, its poor are getting even
poorer, more dispersed and harder to reach, a ranking World Bank
official said.
Poverty is no longer mainly concentrated in specific geographic areas
but is scattered across the map, often emerging in families that have
experienced individual misfortune such as sickness or accidents, the
bank said.
“Traditionally, China has had very successful poverty reduction projects
that focused on helping poor areas grow,” David Dollar, the World Bank’s
country director for China, told a briefing in Beijing. “That continues
to be important but one of our new findings is that more than half of
the remaining poor in China do not live in officially designated poor
villages.”
An analysis of poverty in the period from 2001 to 2003 shows a slight
decline in the income of the poorest 10 percent of China’s population,
the World Bank said, confirming earlier media reports.
“Seventy percent of the poor have had some kind of income shock in the
past couple of years. Maybe they’ve had a crop loss or an unexpected
health problem or an injury,” said Dollar.
While poverty is more scattered, it remains overwhelmingly a rural
problem, according to the World Bank.
“You can go just 100 kilometers (62 miles) from Beijing and find rural
villages where there is not a large number of poor but almost every
village will have a few families living in poverty,” said Dollar.
“Migrant workers from the countryside are usually not among the
extremely poor in China but within the cities, they are the relatively
poor people.”
Overall, however, the World Bank characterized China’s economic policies
as a success story, with 70 million people being lifted out of poverty
in just three years.
In the period from 2001 to 2004, China reduced the number of people
living in poverty — defined as spending less than a dollar a day — from
16 percent to 10 percent, according to the World Bank.
“We feel the policies the government is pursuing are producing overall
reductions in poverty,” said James Adams, the World Bank’s vice
president for East Asia and the Pacific.
China’s leadership is increasingly worried about a widening income gap
brought about by market reforms which have rewarded people with skills
and personal connections, and punished those without. And narrowing the
divide is a high priority for the current generation of leaders who took
over in 2002 and 2003.
“Further poverty reduction in China will require measures that reach
households with different types of safety nets or insurance, for example
health insurance, crop insurance but also welfare programs recognizing
that some households have no adult who can work,” said Dollar.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |