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English 1000, Chinese 1000

China to Drop Urban-Rural Resident Differences

2005/11/15

China plans to abolish legal distinctions between urban and rural residents in 11 of its 23 provinces as the government tries to slow the country's surging wealth gap and reduce social unrest, according to China Daily.

Under an experimental programme, local governments in those provinces will allow rural residents (sometimes referred to as peasants) to register as urban residents and to have the same rights to housing, education, medical care and social security that city dwellers have.

If carried out as advertised, the programme would eliminate a cornerstone of population-control policies implemented in the 1950's. The system of residence permits, known as hukou, tied every person to a locale and once made travel difficult without permission.

In practice, the system has been fading away for more than a decade. An estimated 200 million rural residents have left the countryside to live in urban areas, some of them full time. Their access to urban services varies widely depending on local rules and the kind of employment they find.

In today's market-oriented economy, the once-comprehensive socialist benefits bestowed on urban residents carry far less weight. Most people rely on their own resources or those of their employers to pay for health care, housing and schooling.

"This is an old-style way of managing a huge country and no longer makes sense with a market economy," said Qin Hui, a historian at Qinghua University in Beijing. "If it's really going away, it is a significant turning point."

Qin said he expects that even if the system disappears, local governments will still try to retain administrative control over their populations. They would still set conditions on registration for urban residents and prevent the growth of slums.

"The cities will become places where the relatively well off live," he said. "Beijing is not going to look like New Delhi, or even like Bangkok."

Economic forces have eroded population controls in recent years. Shenzhen emerged from rice fields in the early 1980's to become one of China's most prosperous metropolitan areas, and nearly all of its 10 million residents were born elsewhere. Shanghai began the concept of a "blue card" for qualified migrant workers in the mid-1990s, giving them full access to housing and city services if they met certain criteria.

The central government declared that it intended to drop the residency permit system at the 16th Communist Party Congress in 2002, and has made incremental changes since.

Doing away with the residency system also fits the political agenda of President Hu Jintao and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao, who have tried to demonstrate that they are more attentive to people left behind in China's economic boom. The market-oriented economy has produced enormous wealth, but it has also generated major social cleavages. An observer said urbanization will continue as an enormous administrative challenge for China and one that the government is unlikely to leave everything to the whims and caprice of the market.

"I think you'll see a situation where the largest cities retain very tight controls, while medium cities are a little looser and newer small cities have more freedom," the observer said.

Among the 11 major provinces involved are Guangdong, Fujian and Liaoning.



 
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