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Happiness comes top of Chinese comfort survey, environment lowest
BEIJING—The environment has
come out as the most unsatisfactory aspects of Chinese life for the
third year running in the state-run Xiaokang Magazine “comfort” survey.
Respondents gave 56.6 out of 100 points to the environment index, making
it the lowest graded of 11 indices. This year, respondents graded the
happiness index highest at 79.6 points. The monthly magazine, a
subsidiary of Qiushi (Seeking Truth) Magazine, which is sponsored by the
Central Committee of Communist Party of China (CPC), has compiled the
“xiaokang (moderate prosperity) indices” since 2005.
The annual survey covers entertainment, food, public services, housing,
health, environment, education, consumption, safety, credit, and
happiness. The general comfort index stood at 64.1 points, slightly up
from 62.1 in 2005, and 63 in 2006. According to the magazine’s grading
guide, 60 is the minimum satisfaction level.
All the indices this year increased from last year except the credit
index, which dropped 0.1 points from 2006, and the environment index,
which stayed the same. The happiness index has stayed the highest and
the environment index the lowest for three years. “The respondents are
not satisfied with the environment mainly because of frequent problems
of environmental pollution and awareness of the issue,” said, Guo Fang,
editor of the magazine in charge of the survey.
The State Environment Protection Administration (SEPA) has said China’s
overall environmental situation was still “serious” with frequent
pollution accidents affecting the quality of life for many. Last year,
842 serious pollution accidents were reported, including 482 cases of
water pollution and 232 cases of air pollution. The food index, which
covers the quality and cost of food, was second highest 72.7 points,
counter to perceptions of discontent due to surging inflation and
quality scares.
“The main reason the respondents rated food higher than last year was
government efforts to control the food quality and safety,” Guo said,
adding food quality had been the major concern for respondents in all
three years. The housing index was another surprising rise due to
soaring property prices in many cities. It stood at 63.7 points, a bit
up from 62.4 in 2006. “We can see that Chinese are not that satisfied
with housing. It was only a few points higher than the minimum level,
but they generally have better homes than in previous years and this
year many respondents said they were impressed by the government efforts
to control rising property prices and had positive expectations,” Guo
said.—Xinhua |