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 East China's long march out of poverty
Category:Current Affairs  
Subject:People and society   ; Finance  
Source:chinadaily.com.cn
Publish Date:08-25-2016
 
Nine months ago, 56-year-old farmer Yang Lanying's family was earning no more than 2,000 yuan a year - the equivalent of just $300.
In her own words, she "just survived", selling produce from her tiny rice farm in Jiecunxiang, Xingguo county - in east China's Jiangxi province.
Now, she earns that same amount every month. It's still not great, but it's a life-changing improvement.
"I'm still the poorest in my village, but now I feel much better than before," she told China Daily. "I just need to work harder."
In September, local government officials constructed a farming greenhouse on the outskirts of Yang's village, as part of President Xi Jinping's anti-poverty drive in the region. They began employing Yang, and others.
Yang - a mother of two, who helps support her grandchildren - is now paid 60 yuan a day. It's not as much as the 80 yuan given to her male colleagues, but it's far more than that earned by the estimated 50,000 other Xingguo villagers who local officials have declared are living below the poverty line - earning less than 2,300 yuan a year.
It's a symbolic number. Eighty years ago, 50,000 Red Army soldiers were killed near this region … ambushed during the early days of the Communist forces' Long March trek which eventually laid an important foundation for the Communist victory in the civil war. In many ways, a battle continues - against poverty.
"My husband is sick and he can't do anything," Yang said. "The medical care was not very good, but now my husband can get support … we can see a doctor. "Before I had no money to buy anything. Now I can buy a television."
Yang's story isn't an isolated one among the almost 40 million Chinese people living in the wide-reaching Jiangxi province. Two hours south, in Yudu county, locals still need to take out personal loans to live in government-funded, high-rise affordable housing villages.
Yet, local officials there are also making some progress through a surprising avenue: online shopping.
Historically, many farmers in the county couldn't even use a computer, let alone afford one. But, since early 2015, Taobao service stations have been helping sell local produce online, to reach a much larger consumer base.
According to officials, that has led to locals selling - and buying - goods worth a total of 72 million yuan, since the service stations were constructed.
"This business model can not only solve the problem of local farmers not being able to sell outside of the county … it also attracts many migrant workers to come back home to start their own business," Guo Qingfeng, from Yudu county's business development bureau, told reporters.
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