April 15, 2021

China’s road to poverty alleviation


The economic development of China has been construed as miraculous by many experts, state heads and international financial institutions including the World Bank. By 2010, Chinese average economic growth had reached at about 10% and even exceeded expectations of Deng Xiaoping, the initiator of China’s reform program.

China’s transition from a small agrarian society to global economic powerhouse was splendid. Between 1978 and 2019, China’s trade as a percentage of GDP had roughly quadrupled. Chinese per capita GDP, which was just one-third of Sub-Saharan Africa, increased 65 times in forty years with an economy that once accounted for only 5% of the global economy now contributing 17% of global GDP.

Forty years ago, about 80% of the country’s population was living below the poverty line. The biggest of all successes is undoubtedly China’s victory in pulling 800 million people out of poverty as well as providing improved education, health and other services.

Targeted poverty alleviation has been the cornerstone of China’s poverty control strategy. The approach, first proposed in 2013, called for the implementation of tailored sets of targeted measures to eradicate poverty and build a moderately prosperous society in the country.

Building Xiaokang topped Xi Jinping’s “four comprehensives.” In his New Year message in 2016, Chinese president sought his nation and teammates to join forces and exert combined and concerted efforts to win the key battle against rural poverty to realize the vision of moderately prosperous society in all respects.

The national approach, among other system designs, encompassed seven institutionalized systems: accountability, policy, investment, assistance, social mobilization, supervision and assessment. It further established a “five-batch” policy to take each batch of registered territory out of poverty through industrial development, relocation, eco-compensation, education and social security.

Xi’s call sounded death knell for absolute poverty and rescued the remaining several dozen million rural people out of absolute poverty. Chinese win against poverty means a lot for the world as Beijing overall contributed 70% of global poverty reduction and made the key UN sustainable development goal, threatening to get distant as pandemic decelerates the poverty escape rate to one-third, more accessible.

After eight years of backbreaking work, per capita disposable income of rural poor has doubled from 6,079 yuan to 12,588 yuan and 832 impoverished counties and 128,000 poor villages have been declared poverty-free. Beijing’s proposed monitoring system and five-year plan would ensure that these counties and villages do not fall into poverty again.

Extreme poverty in China totaled 98.99 million in 2012. It was zero at the close of 2020, which means the poverty alleviation campaign was backed by the government's quick and substantial resource allocation, allowing Beijing to help more than 30,000 rural residents shake off the extreme poverty every day.

While pandemic exacerbates challenges to global poverty together with conflict and climate change, China didn’t break the five-year streak of apportioning 20 billion yuan special funds toward poverty eradication and earmarked 146 billion yuan (about $22.4 billion) in 2020 including increase. China’s investment in program over the last eight year has now reached 1.6 trillion yuan (around $246 billion).

The ambition of a moderately prosperous society was a Gordian knot without providing basic facilities and infrastructure development. By upgrading public services such as education, healthcare and housing – Beijing tapered off core issues of its people and through reconstructing roads, laying rail lines and developing technological infrastructure – the government linked destitute areas with developed parts of the country and world and aided them to boost their income and skills.

For Chinese minorities, Beijing pooled resources to launch extraordinary large-scale poverty-relief campaigns and implemented development plans. Beijing’s social mobilization covered all 30 autonomous prefectures inhabited by ethnic communities and strengthened anti-poverty cooperation between east and west China.

Between 2016 and 2020, five minority areas – Inner Mongolia, Guangxi, Tibet, Ningxia and Xinjiang – and three provinces with a large multi-ethnic population – Guizhou, Yunnan and Qinghai) – made great strides as number of poor headcount in all the regions dropped by 15.6 million with abolition of absolute poverty in all 28 minority ethnic groups.

Chinese government rerouted specialized funds of about 300 billion yuan ($45.7 billion) to these 8 minority zones in the last five years. Almost 45% of national total addressed income disparities within ethnic minorities and raised their per capita income to 10,000 yuan ($1,530) in 2020, bringing them at par with and even beyond the international benchmark of ultra-poor.

Some put ifs and buts to play down Chinese heroic-scale action against poverty but neither of them can take nothing away from Beijing’s triumph since they admit that incomes of rural people and minorities were significantly boosted “out of the toughest standards of living over the last few decades,” the UN bodies have lauded the miracle and the World Bank had long-predicted China was on track to eliminate absolute poverty by 2020.

As developing countries from Asia and Africa romanticize China’s dream growth and seek to learn from it to help their people languished in poverty and there are lessons that could be learnt – a big heart what is required from the developed world, unequivocally appreciate Chinese emphatic win against abject poverty and support international institutions to share the experiences learned.

*This is one of my opinion pieces (unedited) that first appeared in "The Express Tribune":
https://tribune.com.pk/story/2294739/chinas-road-to-poverty-alleviation