China's state loan system
has assisted 2.3 million college students from poor families by
issuing 19.09 billion yuan (about US$2.39 billion) in interest-free
loans since 1999, Chinese Ministry of Education said on
Tuesday.
Since June 2004, the Chinese government has granted
interest-free loans to 1.441 million college students by issuing
around 1.211 billion yuan (US$151 million), the ministry
said.
China introduced a pilot
state education loan system in 1999 in eight major cities,
including Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, etc. The system was extended to the
rest of the country in 2004.
By April 2006, 15.4 percent of the students studying
in colleges and universities sponsored by the central government
departments had received loans, according to Yuan Guiren, vice
minister of education, at a signing ceremony between the Bank of
China and the ministry on the loan management for the next five
years.
In China, families have to pay at least 8,000 yuan
(US$975.6) every year for their child's college education, which
means farmers have to shell out years of income.
Statistics from the ministry show China now has 15.62
million college students, of which three million come from poor
families.
A new policy dubbed as "Green Channel" will be put
into practice to ensure that every poor student can go to school,
the ministry said.
(Xinhua News Agency July 13, 2006)
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