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Poverty alleviation, inequality and welfare in rural China

By: Selden, Mark.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 1999Description: p.3183-190.Subject(s): Poverty - China | Poverty In: Economic and Political WeeklySummary: China has made significant gains in reducing rural poverty as a result of extensive and rapid growth supplemented by the poverty alleviation programmes in major rural backwaters. Yet, recent decades have also brought dismantling of community-based health and welfare programmes, with no discernable progress in extension of universal social security to the countryside. Rapid increases in absolute and relative population above age of 60, rising dependency ratios in which a shrinking labouring class must support the aged and infirm, and galloping inequality that threatens to make China's income distribution the most unequal in the world, all highlight the importance of effective and reliable welfare and pension programmes. The paper concludes that social welfare, poverty and inequality, slighted in China's race to growth, will confront it in the years to come. - Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
Volume no: 34, Issue no: 45 Available AR43458

China has made significant gains in reducing rural poverty as a result of extensive and rapid growth supplemented by the poverty alleviation programmes in major rural backwaters. Yet, recent decades have also brought dismantling of community-based health and welfare programmes, with no discernable progress in extension of universal social security to the countryside. Rapid increases in absolute and relative population above age of 60, rising dependency ratios in which a shrinking labouring class must support the aged and infirm, and galloping inequality that threatens to make China's income distribution the most unequal in the world, all highlight the importance of effective and reliable welfare and pension programmes. The paper concludes that social welfare, poverty and inequality, slighted in China's race to growth, will confront it in the years to come. - Reproduced

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