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China's poverty alleviation: a lesson for Africa

China.org.cn/Chinagate.cn by Mariatou Ngum ,October 02, 2019 Adjust font size:

The African continent enjoys a long and rich history of friendship with the People’s Republic of China. China has accompanied Africa on its road to economic prosperity for over 50 years, dating back to when a good number of African countries attained their independence.

As the world’s largest developing country, China has scored remarkable achievements in poverty alleviation. Sinologists often attribute that the success behind the emergence of China’s economic achievement is due to the unity in the Communist Party of China (CPC) and its leadership.

The 3rd Plenary Session of the 11th CPC Central Committee, held in December 1978 with a focus on economic development, established the basic road map for China and marked the beginning of the famous reform-and-opening-up efforts.

At that time, China launched the institutional reforms in the ownership of rural farmland, market reforms, and reforms in the employment system.

The low-yield fields transformation project in Tangyuan County of Jiamusi City, Heilongjiang Province has brought farmers an income growth.

With a total population of 1.3 billion, today the country still struggles to transform the lives of about 70 million people who are still living in poverty. But efforts are being made by the government to eradicate poverty completely by reducing the impoverished population by at least 10 million every year.

“Between 1981 and 2004, China went from more than two-thirds of the population living on less than $1 a day, to fewer than one person in ten living in poverty,” according to Makhtar Diop, the World Bank Vice President for the Africa Region.

According to the World Bank, from 1981 to 2010 the global impoverished population dropped by 723 million, 94.2 percent of which has come from China’s poverty alleviation push. A recent analysis – comparing China, India, and Brazil – of the impact of growth on poverty found that China’s growth reduced poverty at a rate 50 percent higher than that of Brazil, and even higher than that of India.

In China, this has held especially true for progress in agriculture, where growth has had four times as great an impact on reducing poverty than growth in manufacturing or services.

However, in contrast to the major strides taken in China, growth in Africa has been accompanied by much slower poverty reduction.

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