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China increases subsistence allowance
BEIJING— China has increased
the monthly minimum living allowance by 15 yuan (2.05 U.S. dollars) in
urban areas per person and by 10 yuan for rural residents this year, the
Ministry of Civil Affairs (MCA) said on Monday.
The MCA and the Ministry of Finance jointly issued a circular ordering
much importance should be attached to the impact of consumer price
increases of basic life necessities on poor families. It asked local
authorities to “increase allowances and deliver extra subsidies to the
needy so as to ensure them a happy and harmonious Spring Festival”.
The allowances should be delivered on time, it said. The average monthly
allowance in 2007 was 182.4 yuan in urban areas per person and 70 yuan
in rural areas. The rural allowance was less than that in urban areas
because living costs there were lower. The rural minimum living
allowance system was formally established last year in all 31 provinces,
autonomous regions and municipalities on the Chinese mainland, 10 years
after the system was set up in urban areas.
Under the system, subsidies vary by region according to economic
conditions, but the basic requirement is to enable low-income people in
urban and rural areas to have adequate food and clothing. The number of
rural beneficiaries was 34.5 million in 2007, an increase of 19.48
million or 128.7 percent from the previous year, statistics show.
Beneficiaries include villagers who suffer chronic living difficulties
because of illness, disability, aging or poor living conditions.
Official statistics showed China had 21.48 million rural people with an
annual income of less than 85 U.S. dollars in 2006. More than 22.7
million low-income urban residents received minimum living allowances
last year, an increase of 300,000 people year-on-year. Urban and rural
Chinese with financial difficulties benefited “equally” from the
government’s minimum living allowance system last year, the Ministry of
Civil Affairs said on Thursday.
The number of rural beneficiaries hit 34.5 million at the end of 2007,
an increase of 19.48 million or 128.7 percent from the previous year,
figures in a report released by the ministry showed. And more than 22.7
million low-income urban residents received minimum living allowances
last year, an increase of 300,000 people year-on-year. |