Dengan ukuran pendapatan kurang dari 1USD/hari sekitar 43.35 juta orang yang 
dianggap miskin, tidak tahu berapa angka yang didapat seandainya standard World 
Bank 2USD/hari itu yang dipakai? apakah mencapai ratusan juta?
---Beijing considers people poor if they earn less than 2,300 yuan ($335) per 
year. By World Bank global standards, less than $700 qualifies as extreme 
poverty.Today, in a country of 1.3 billion, 43.35 million people meet Beijing's 
definition of poverty....
Poverty-free China by 2020? Beijing says it's possible – but steepest climb 
ahead


  
|  
|   
|   
|   |    |

   |

  |
|  
|   |  
Poverty-free China by 2020? Beijing says it's possible – but steepest c...
 By The Christian Science Monitor While President Xi Jinping’s foreign-policy 
initiatives have made headlines abroad, one of his most ambitious do...  |   |

  |

  |

 


PROGRESS WATCH 
While President Xi Jinping’s foreign-policy initiatives have made headlines 
abroad, one of his most ambitious domestic priorities is entering the final 
stretch: the race to build a 'moderately prosperous society.'


   
   - Michael HoltzStaff writer |  @michaelrholtz

JUNE 22, 2017  TUANJIE VILLAGE, CHINA—Before the pigs arrived, Yu Anhen and her 
husband eked out a living as subsistence farmers in the remote mountains of 
Guizhou, one of China’s poorest provinces. Then, two months ago, a government 
official came to them with an offer of 5,000 yuan ($735) to buy three piglets. 
Ms. Yu eagerly said yes. She saw it as an opportunity to ease her family’s 
finances and help pay for her son’s college tuition.“My husband and I are 
getting old and it’s getting harder for us to work outside,” Yu says. “Raising 
pigs will help us.” The largest pig should be ready for market in four to five 
months, where Yu hopes it will sell for about 3,000 yuan ($440). If the other 
two go for a similar price, she and her husband will be out of poverty, as 
China defines it, for the first time in their lives – and Beijing will be a 
fraction closer to its goal of eliminating poverty entirely by 2020. China has 
been at the forefront of the world’s poverty-reduction efforts for nearly four 
decades. More than 700 million people in the countryside have risen out of 
poverty, largely thanks to China’s economic boom. But there's an asterisk next 
to those accomplishments. Beijing considers people poor if they earn less than 
2,300 yuan ($335) per year. By World Bank global standards, less than $700 
qualifies as extreme poverty.Today, in a country of 1.3 billion, 43.35 million 
people meet Beijing's definition of poverty. That number is down to 250 in 
Tuanjie, a shabby village of 3,000 people that is surrounded by terraced corn 
fields and green mountains in southwestern China. If all goes as planned, says 
Xiong Jun, the village head, “We will leave poverty in 2019.”
How much do you know about China? Take our quiz.
Mr. Xiong’s confidence is buoyed by the sheer scale of China’s poverty 
alleviation campaign, whose strategies include relocations, cash handouts, and 
job training. While much attention has focused on President Xi Jinping’s 
ambitious foreign-policy initiatives – from his military build-up in the South 
China Sea to the $900 billion “One Belt, One Road” infrastructure and trade 
program – poverty alleviation has emerged as one of his top domestic 
priorities.The Chinese government has allocated more than 140 billion yuan 
($20.5 billion) for poverty alleviation programs this year alone. For Mr. Xi, 
pulling everyone out of poverty is “the baseline task for building a moderately 
prosperous society.” But as the campaign enters its final stretch and as 
China’s economy slows, the work is likely to only get harder. The campaign 
ramped up two years ago after Xi paid a visit to Guizhou on June 18, 2015. A 
week earlier, four young siblings in a village not far from Tuanjie had 
committed suicide by drinking pesticide, after their parents abandoned them in 
search of work. Their deaths sparked a national debate about rural poverty, 
with some blaming local officials for a lack of services, and renewed the 
government’s push to end it.“Poverty is nothing to fear,” he said in the 
impoverished village of Huamao. “If we have determination and confidence, we 
can overcome any difficulty.” The landlocked province of Guizhou has since 
emerged as ground zero. In April, Chen Miner, the provincial party chief and 
one of Xi’s close allies, reaffirmed his commitment to helping more than 3.7 
million people in the province escape poverty over the next three years. More 
than 750,000 will be relocated from mountainous villages to more prosperous 
towns and cities this year. In a move underscoring Xi’s support for the 
campaign, party members in Guizhou unanimously elected him to represent the 
province at the important 19th National Communist Party Congress that will take 
place this fall.Considerable hurdles remain. Analysts say the next 2-1/2 years 
will be the hardest because many of the remaining poor in China have physical 
or mental disabilities that make it difficult to hold down a steady job. The 
Civil Affairs Ministry announced in January that about 40 percent of China’s 
poor are poor because of their health. Meanwhile, corruption and bureaucratic 
inefficiencies have hampered poverty alleviation programs across the country. 
In March, the party secretary from the county that includes Tuanjie was 
expelled from the party and faces criminal charges for having allegedly 
embezzled more than 174,000 yuan ($25,000). In 2016, authorities launched a 
five-year campaign against corruption in the anti-poverty programs, but 
problems persist.Then there’s the physical challenge. The government plans to 
relocate 3.4 million people from poor areas by 2020, but providing support to 
people who remain in China’s most remote communities is no easy task. “We’re 
getting to a point now where it’s more difficult to access these populations,” 
says Ben Westmore, a senior economist at the Organisation for Economic 
Cooperation and Development (OECD) who has studied China’s poverty alleviation 
efforts. “There aren’t deep pockets of poverty anymore. It’s more widely 
spread, which can be more of a challenge to target.”Perhaps nowhere is that 
truer than in the steep mountains and isolated hamlets of Guizhou. But the 
province’s budding technology industry may help not just with jobs, but 
government oversight. Officials in a district of Bijie, the prefecture-level 
city that includes Tuanjie, have developed a smartphone app for tracking every 
person and household below the poverty line. Field workers can use the app to 
look up information about poor families across the district and to provide 
updates. Zhu Yongzhen, deputy director of agriculture for the district, says 
the app will soon include a “public supervision” feature to improve 
transparency.For now, Mr. Zhu uses the app whenever he visits one of the 12 
households he supervises. He’ll upload photographs and write brief messages to 
explain how much progress they’ve made. Sometimes he’ll write simple 
observations, like he did on a recent visit to an elderly couple’s home. “The 
government takes care of them,” he wrote. “They don’t need to worry about their 
food and clothes. Hope they keep healthy.”Xie Yujuan contributed reporting.

Kirim email ke