Plan to lift all out of poverty in 6 years

Plan to lift all out of poverty in 6 years

BEIJING - China hopes to lift all its 70 million living beneath the poverty line to safety within the next six years, at an average rate of a million people a month, a Cabinet official said.

Despite rapid economic growth in the last two decades, poverty remains a huge issue in China, especially in rural areas where a lack of jobs drives able-bodied adults to work elsewhere, leaving children and the elderly behind.

"We have six years to eradicate all poverty," said Hong Tianyun, deputy director of China's State Council Leading Group Office of Poverty Alleviation and Develop­ment of China, on the government's website yesterday.

About 70 million people, mostly in the countryside, live beneath China's poverty line, earning less than 2,300 yuan (S$510) annually, the official Xinhua news agency reported last month, citing data from the National Bureau of Statistics.

Hong added that the short timeframe put pressure on local governments.

"If there are no special major initiatives, it will be extremely difficult to achieve this mission," Hong said. "So, from the central to local authorities, from top to bottom, the pressure has been coming down."

The central treasury has channelled more money into a poverty relief fund this year after results last year fell short, analysts have said.

About 12.3 million people earned enough in 2014 to move above the poverty line, compared with 43.3 million in 2011.

China has previously set 2020 as a target for eliminating poverty within its borders, proposing a programme including free vocational schools, better public services, financing for new businesses and improvements in rural healthcare and roads.

But concerns about the yawning gap between the rich and the poor have intensified as the world's second-largest economy slows.

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