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Agriculture
of China
Agriculture
is the cornerstone of China's national economy
because about 80 percent of China's 1.2
billion people live in the countryside.
To feed the vast population, to raise the
living standards, of the rural people, and
to develop the whole country's economy,
China has given top priority to agriculture
in its economic expansion.
It was from the rural areas
that China's reform began. The contract
household responsibility system was pioneered
by the Chinese farmers decide what to replace
the people's commune system. Today, farmers
decide what to produce and how and where
to sell reform of the grain purchase and
sales system, and a floating pricing system
for acquatic products and sales system,
and a floating pricing system for acquatic
products, fruits and many other farm products
was introduced. Some 29 provinces, autonomous
regions and municipalities in the country
have decontrolled the purchase and municipalities
in the country have decontrolled the purchase
and sales prices for grain. The mandatory
plan for agriculture and the provincial-level
allocation plan have been abolished nationwide.
Positive
trends have appeared in China's agricultural
development. Despite a continued reduction
in the nation's cultivated land, the total
grain output of 1993 hit 456.4 billion kg.
and that of oil-bearing crops rose to 17.61
million tons. Meat production rose by 5.5%
and acquatic production by 11.8% in 1993
over 1992. With constant growth in total
output, agricultural production has become
more adaptable to the changing demands of
consumers and, instead of pursuing a mere
growth in output, efforts are directed towards
seeking higher unit yield and greater variety.
The past 17 years have seen
a boom in the township and village industry
in China. Millions of farmers, especially
those in the coastal areas, devoting a small
amount of their time to working in the fields.
That is known, in the jargon of the farmers
"quitting the land not the home village
"And that is the single most important
reason why many farmers have embarked on
the road to prosperity . What is more? some
of the have been so successful that the
have been granted import and export rights
by the government. No wonder the per-capita
income for most farmers rose to 921 yuan
in 1993 from 133.6 yuan in 1978.
While
china's rural reform has been hailed as
a success story the government has never
slackened its effort to expand agriculture.
That is largely because china has a very
large rural population and because the basic
foundation of agriculture is still rather
weak . Natural disasters hit the country
continuously; hardly a year passes without
seeing some areas visited by floods, droughts,
earthquakes or forest fires. Investment
is never adequate . And as the coastal areas
make strides in economic growth , some inland
provinces and autonomous regions, especially
the mountainous, difficult to reach western
regions, are found to be lagging increasingly
behind, a phenomenon which is known as the
"gap between the east and the west".
Fortunately
the government is keenly aware of the problems
China faces in rural development. Vigorous
steps are being taken to develop agriculture
to meet the challenge of modernization and
urbanization, to bridge the "gap between
the east and the west", and to enable
the farmers to embark on a road of common
prosperity. One step is to increase investment
in agriculture. Another is to promote scientific
farming. A third is to encourage the "east"
to help to 'west".
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