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Accurate Household Targeting: China’s New Anti-Poverty Strategy
SANGUI WANG
CHINA ANTI-POVERTY RESEARCH INSTITUTE, RENMIN UNIVERSITY OF CHINA
I. Progress in poverty alleviation after the reformChina achieved remarkable progress in poverty reduction since early 1980s◦ According to the World Bank’s poverty line of US$1.9 a day, China cut
the number of poor people by 8.6 million in the past 30 years, from 884 million in 1981 to 25 million in 2013 and with an annual poverty reduction ate of 11.8%
◦ China was the first country to complete the MDG goal of poverty reduction. By 2002, it had reduced the percentage of the poor in rural areas to 30 percent, which was 60 percent in 1990. The figure was further lowered to 4.2 percent in 2014
◦ China’s contribution to reducing the rate of global poverty exceeded 70 percent
I. Progress in Poverty Alleviation after the reform
China’s poverty reduction, 1981-2013
Data source: World Bank Development Indicator
I. Progress in Poverty Alleviation after the reform◦ China’s official estimations show similar trends
◦ measured at the 1978 poverty line, rural poor population in China decreased from 250 million in 1978 to 15 million in 2007 with an annual reduction rate of 9.2 %
◦ Total poor population reduced from 94 million in 2000 to 27 million in 2010 measured at NBS 2008 poverty line and the annual reduction rate was 11.7%
◦ Measured at NBS 2010 poverty line, total poor population decreased from 166 million in 2010 to 43 million in 2006 and the annual reduction rate was 20%
I. Progress in Poverty Alleviation after the reform
China’s rural poverty reduction, 1978-2016
Data source: National Bureau of Statistics of China
I. Progress in Poverty Alleviation after the reformFactors contributed to large scale of poverty reduction◦ Fast economic growth, esp. agricultural growth
◦ Targeted poverty alleviation effort has helped narrow the gap between different regions and accelerate economic and social development of poverty-stricken areas
◦ Establishment of social security system in rural areas since 2007
◦ Inclusive rural policies have benefited vast sections of the impoverished in rural areas, e.g. “grain for green” campaign, agricultural tax reform, nine-year free compulsory education, etc.
◦ Equal land distribution
I. Progress in Poverty Alleviation after the reform
Major poverty alleviation programsTime of
implementationTargets
Voluntary resettlementFood for work (public work)Subsidized loansBudgetary development fundsPoverty alleviation through technological
advancementPoverty alleviation through social effortsCompulsory education projects in poor regionsMicrocredit Integrated Village development planPromoting labor migration through trainingAgribusiness“Two Basic Education Plans” in western ChinaVillage bankingMinimum living standard programRegional development Accurately targeting the poor
19831985198619861986
19861995199620012004200420042006200720112013
Poor counties Poor counties Poor regions Poor counties Poor regions
Poor regions Western ChinaPoor regions Poor villages Poor counties Poor regions Poor regions Poor villagesPoor households14 Designated poor regionsPoor households
I. Progress in Poverty Alleviation after the reform
Year Poorest
20% of
pop. in
poor
counties
Poor
village
Poor
county
Rural
China
Income
ratio of
poor pop.
to rural
areas
Income
ratio of
poor
villages
to rural
areas
Income
ratio of
poor
counties to
rural areas
2002 519 1196 1305 2476 21 48 53
2003 494 1305 1384 2581 19 51 54
2004 533 1398 1489 2758 19 51 54
2005 597 1501 1585 2991 20 50 53
2006 665 1643 1746 3248 20 51 54
2007 696 1860 1957 3557 20 52 55
2008 813 2005 2106 3841 21 52 55
2009 875 2300 4170 21 55
Growth
rate
(02-08)
7.77 8.99 8.3 7.59
Income growth of the poor and poor regions
Data source: National Bureau of Statistics of China
II. Challenges in Rural Poverty Reduction Slowdown of economic growth, from 10% to 6.7%
Increasing of income inequality, Gini index from 0.288 to 0.469
The poor dose not benefit equally from poverty alleviation programs targeted at poor regions
II. Challenges in Rural Poverty Reduction
Year Lowestquintile
Secondquintile
Thirdquintile
Forthquintile
Highestquintile
All
2002 519 903 1175 1523 2406 1305
2003 494 920 1258 1698 2885 1384
2004 533 987 1358 1840 3150 1489
2005 597 1077 1461 1935 3222 1585
2006 665 1163 1582 2136 3665 1746
2007 696 1293 1775 2393 4150 1957
2008 813 1421 1930 2596 4374 2106
2009 875 1533 2096 2834 4843 2300
2010 940 1714 2343 3182 5411 2557
Growthrate(02-10)
7.7 8.33 9.01 9.65 10.66 8.77
Income growth of different quintile in designated poor counties
Data source: National Bureau of Statistics of China
II. Challenges in Rural Poverty Reduction
Park and Wang, 2010
Effect of village investment program on household income p.c., consumption p.c.(village nearest neighbor matching estimates)
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household TargetingIn November 2013, President Xi Jinping first put forward the strategy of “precision poverty alleviation” during his visit to western Hunan, and the strategy has become a significant part of China’s fight against poverty.
Precision poverty alleviation targets every poor household and individual, instead of promoting regional development of poverty-stricken areas
Precision poverty alleviation includes accurate identification, assistance, management, and assessment.
The goal is to eradicate extreme poverty under $2.3 dollar a day by 2020
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household TargetingChina has identified 29.48 million poor households with a total population of 89.62 million in 2013. This figure dropped to 43.33 million by the end of 2016.
Moreover, the country has registered all the poor households and population and details about the families, available resources, income sources, and reasons of poverty in the national poverty alleviation information system.
These identified and recorded poor households are the main targets of all types of poverty alleviation programs.
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household TargetingThe government has taken a series of measures and launched different types of programs to push forward precision poverty alleviation◦ Promotion of income-generation activities, esp. cooperative agricultural
production and value chain development, as well as rural tourism development that target the poor
◦ Asset building for the poor◦ Relocating 10 million of the poor in remote areas, in harsh natural conditions,
to comparatively more hospitable natural villages or small towns with a view to improving the environment and conditions for their development◦ The governments and state-owned policy banks have mobilized RMB 600 billion yuan for
the relocation in the 13th-Five-Year-Plan period
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household Targeting
◦ Helping a batch of poor households reduce poverty through ecological compensation policies◦ Subsidies for those who returned their farmlands to forests or pastures to grassland
◦ Inter-regional ecological compensation to subsidize households in areas that provide ecosystem function
◦ 280 thousand poor people were hired as forest rangers with an annual salary of 10,000 yuan last year
◦ Helping poor households reduce poverty through strengthening education◦ Developing preschool education in poverty-stricken areas
◦ Providing free high school or occupational school education and living allowances for students from identified poor families
◦ This will not only reduce the education expenditure of poor households, but also help end inter-generational transmission of poverty
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household Targeting◦ Helping poor households through social security measures
◦ Expanding the coverage and increasing subsidies of the minimum living allowances
◦ Extending and reforming rural cooperative medical care system
◦ Providing severe-disease medical insurance and assistance
◦ Assisting poor households with chronic diseases
◦ Pension insurance for poor households
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household TargetingClear division of duties and improvement of governance◦ Central government is responsible for overall planning, province-level governments for
coordination, and county-level governments for implementation◦ Party secretaries and governors of all poor counties have to remain in their duty till the fulfillment of the task for
poverty reduction in their counties
◦ To strengthen community-level poverty alleviation capacity, governments at various levels have dispatched officials to act as first secretary and poverty relief team leaders in 128,000 poverty-stricken villages
◦ Establishing independent third-party poverty reduction assessment mechanism
◦ Academic institutions, non-governmental organizations, and ordinary citizens are also encouraged to participate in poverty relief effort by various means
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household TargetingDecentralization of fund management◦ More than 20 funds for poverty reduction and rural development from
various sources have been integrated at the county level
◦ County governments are responsible for implementing poverty reduction programs and are entitled to distribute and manage the integrated funds according to the demands of poor households.
◦ The central and provincial governments are mainly responsible for supervision, inspection, assessment and evaluation of the efficiency and effectiveness of poverty alleviation programs to prevent misuse of the funds.
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household TargetingGreat progress has been achieved and poverty reduction has been tremendous since 2010
◦ Measured at the PRC’s new poverty line of Y2,300 at 2010 constant price, the rural poor population has been reduced from 166 million in 2010 to 43 million in 2016
◦ The annual poverty reduction rate is 20% and accelerating over time
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household Targeting
Rural poverty reduction rate in recent years, %
Data source: National Bureau of Statistics of China
III. Precision Poverty Alleviation Strategy through Household TargetingChallenges ◦ High administrative cost
◦ Coordination difficulty
◦ Over investment
◦ Negative effects on the incentive of the poor
◦ Hard to duplicate in other developing counties
Thank you!