A Tale of Two Regions
Xinhua News Agency, March 11, 2012 Adjust font size:
China's economic development over the last 30 years has been "a tale of two regions" -- prosperous coastal areas where GDP matches some developed countries and inland areas that have lagged behind.
Now China is doubling down to close the gap between rich and poor areas.
In 2011, China laid out a 10-year development plan for the middle and western areas of the country, demarcating 14 impoverished regions and creating development plans for each region.
Three of the 14 regions are in southwest China's Guizhou Province, which has a total of 65 counties listed as impoverished.
"When these areas develop, it will help to effectively close the gap with the eastern part of the country," said Li Zhanshu, secretary of the Guizhou provincial committee of the Communist Party of China and a deputy to the National People's Congress (NPC), which is meeting now in Beijing.
The gap between the coast and many other parts of China is indeed large.
From 1978 to 2011 per capita GDP in coastal Zhejiang province has risen on average 11.6 percent per year to US$9,000 in 2011, far above the national average. This figure is about three times the amount for Tibet and Gansu Province, in China's west.
Closing this gap has been a major topic of the current annual NPC session and the concurrent meeting of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, China's leading political advisory body.
"In recent years, there has truly been a difference in the development of the eastern and western parts of the country. We've also seen the country do a lot to coordinate development among different regions," Li said.
One of the targets of government attention is Sandu County in Guizhou province. In 2011, its impoverished population increased to 193,000. The county offered assistance to all those whose annual income fell below the 2011 per capita poverty line of 2,300 yuan (US$365).
Zhang Jiachun, head of the Sandu County government, said assisting the impoverished people in his county is a big challenge, but this year's government proposals give him hope.
"Premier Wen Jiabao's government work report talked about regularizing the development of small-scale financial institutions, of creating sound systems to assist small and micro-enterprises and rural development. We feel extremely encouraged," Zhang said.
In the last few years, more and more rural migrants have returned to the countryside to set up businesses. After learning new skills in developed coastal areas and expanding their vision, they have used government support not just to create their own businesses but also to help create jobs in rural areas.
"When I was on an inspection tour, I met a farmer in Sandu County. He only had a primary school education. He worked in a hair salon in Kunshan near Shanghai for five years then returned to his hometown planning to open a hair salon," Zhang said.
"He only had 20,000 yuan in savings. Later, he got a small government loan and opened a hair salon in the county seat. He hired several employees. Because his skills were good, his business was doing well after a year or so," Zhang said.