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| China has been criticised for setting the poverty line too low |
China has
redefined the level at which people in rural areas are considered poor to
include everyone earning less than $1 a day (6.5 yuan).
Previously
people in the countryside were only regarded as poor if they earned less than
55 cents a day.
The move
should see millions more people get access to state benefits.
Some 27
million people were classified as rural poor last year. The new threshold is
expected to increase that number fourfold.
Chinese
President Hu Jintao has made tackling rural poverty a cornerstone of his
leadership.
He has
rolled out large-scale development projects across China's poverty-stricken
western provinces, in a bid to create what he calls a "harmonious
society".
On Tuesday,
state media quoted him as saying that by 2020 no-one in China would need to
worry about food and clothing.
"Their
access to compulsory education, basic medical care and housing will also be
ensured," he said.
"The
current trend of a widening rich-poor gap will be reversed."
Many of Mr
Hu's plans have target dates set far in the future, which analysts say represent
an attempt to build a legacy.
He is
expected to step down from his leadership roles in the next two years.
China has
been widely criticised for setting the poverty line too low.
But the
latest move puts Beijing much closer to the World Bank's threshold of $1.25 a
day.
Those newly
classified as poor will be entitled to government help such as subsidies, job
training, discounted loans and employment opportunities at government-funded
rural infrastructure projects.


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