• Thursday, April 25, 2024
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BusinessDay

World watches as China mounts ambitious bid to end all poverty by 2020

China-president-Xi Jinping

In the small village of Gaibao, locals are filming short videos of their unspoiled and idyllic countryside on the Kwai streaming app.

One clip shows four young women laughing as they grab fat fish out of the rice fields with their hands. In another they don traditional outfits and stand next to an ox plowing a paddy field. “Do you all have a farm such as this?” the caption asks.

Their short videos are a small part of a massive nationwide attempt to lift all of China’s 1.4 billion people out of poverty by 2020 — a goal which President Xi Jinping set in a speech in 2015.

The Chinese government defines poverty as earning less than $416 (2,800 yuan) a year or around $1.10 a day — a lower benchmark than the World Bank poverty line of $1.90 a day, or just under $700 a year.

Beijing has dispatched about 775,000 party officials to drive the anti-poverty campaign. Many are going door-to-door to work out what the government can do to help.

Those who fail in their missions to alleviate poverty could face career oblivion, according to state media.

Stills from the Gaibao village’s Kuaishou page, where they raise money through videos of their everyday lives.

The idea to stream videos of the village came from Gaibao’s chief poverty alleviation official, Wu Yusheng, and has helped the town, in the province of Guizhou, sell its organic produce online.

Residents also receive virtual gifts from fans via the app, which they can exchange for cash.

Wu, who arrived in the village in 2018, said he had already achieved his goal — but it is unclear whether Xi will do the same.

At worst, some experts fear the ruling Communist Party might just announce poverty has been eradicated, regardless of the reality, to avoid embarrassing Xi.

“Local leaders are taking it extremely seriously, almost in a panicky way. Part of the problem is that they don’t know really what to do, so they’re kind of grasping at different solutions,” said John Donaldson, a poverty expert and associate professor at Singapore Management University. “They’re throwing everything at it.”

The dream of eradicating widespread poverty in China didn’t begin with Xi. It dates back to the Communist Party’s rise to power in 1949.

“The reason for the existence of the Chinese Communist Party in the beginning is because of injustice and poverty among farmers,” Donaldson said.

Chairman Mao Zedong’s economic experiments, however, actually set the country back, according to Steve Tsang, director of the China Institute at the University of London.

“In 1949, Shanghai was still a richer city than Hong Kong. In 1949, any coastal province was richer and more developed than Taiwan. In 1979, Hong Kong and Taiwan were way, way ahead,” Tsang said.

Mao’s disastrous Great Leap Forward, beginning in 1958, was ostensibly an attempt to transform a mainly agrarian society through industrialization and collectivization. Instead, it helped create a famine that cost tens of millions of lives and aggravated poverty across the country.

Things began to change after Mao’s death. In 1978, then-paramount leader Deng Xiaoping began liberalizing China’s economy and one of his first reforms was to let struggling farmers sell excess produce to make a profit.

China’s efforts to combat poverty since then have been staggering. In 1990, there were more than 750 million people living in poverty across the nation, according to the World Bank — over60% of the population.

Almost 30 years later in 2019, Beijing says that number has dropped to just 16.6 million.

One of the Communist Party’s main claims to power in recent years has been that it has lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty.

Perhaps for that reason, Xi still isn’t satisfied. Despite the growing wealth of China’s major cities such as Shanghai or Beijing, parts of rural China live without electricity, fresh water and adequate food or clothing.

In his 2015 speech, Xi said he was inspired to make poverty a priority by his experience working in the countryside in the 1960s when his father, a prominent party official, fell from favor during Mao’s Cultural Revolution.

“I toiled with the villagers at the time, with the aim to make life a bit better, but it was harder than reaching the sky in that year,” he said.

The government’s plan is broadly divided into two strategies — big national policies and small local interventions.

At a national level, the policies revolve around infrastructure spending. Xi’s administration is pouring billions of dollars into the problem, $19 billion in 2019 alone, which has been spent on a variety of projects and initiatives across the country.

More than 200,000 kilometers (124,274 miles) of roads were built or renovated in 2018 and 94% of poor villages were connected to the internet, according to government figures.

Dozens of state-owned enterprises have joined the campaign and poured more than $4 billion (30 billion yuan) into poverty relief programs as of early 2019, according to state media.

Some of these big-ticket projects have sparked controversy.

A number of provincial governments have been accused of trying to simply move millions of poor people to newly built urban accommodation to raise them out of poverty.

Some older rural citizens have refused to go, while others have moved but then returned to their old homes. Maggie Lau, a professor at Hong Kong’s Lingnan University, said such schemesaren’t always pragmatic.

“If they move to a higher-cost area, how can they afford those new living costs?” she asks.