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Opinion | Revitalising China’s rural regions is Xi Jinping’s next priority

  • For President Xi Jinping, a widening urban-rural divide is not helping the Chinese dream of national rejuvenation
  • With Beijing having declared victory in its battle of ending extreme poverty, Xi is now replacing it with a grander project of “comprehensive rural revitalisation”

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Villagers renovate a rural road in south China’s Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, a mountainous region plagued by poverty. Photo: Xinhua

China’s Central Rural Work Conference, an annual gathering for the nation’s leaders to discuss agriculture and areas where many of the country’s poorest residents live, has sent a consistent message over the last quarter century: Beijing values the importance of its vast countryside and the more than half a billion people who live there.

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It is more than just paying lip service. In a span of about a generation, China has improved infrastructure – from roads to electricity – in the countryside; covered most rural residents with basic health care and pension programmes; and ended “extreme poverty” across rural China.

It is a remarkable improvement from 2000 when Li Changping, a rural cadre, wrote in a famous letter to then-premier Zhu Rongji that “our peasants are really suffering, our countryside is really poor, and our farming is in great danger”.

But despite this, the countryside remains a weak link. Per capita income in rural China is around a third of that in urban areas, and retail sales – a rough measure of consumer spending – was just a sixth of that in urban areas last year, even though 40 per cent of the population lives in the countryside.

Many towns and villages are struggling with an exodus of both talent and funds to cities. It is said that, in many parts of rural China, it is an unwritten rule that to get married, the bridegroom’s family must buy a flat in a nearby city.

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