Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-08-09
China's sweeping hukou reform will grant 100 million migrant workers equal access to urban social welfare by 2020, but many have started to wonder where the 100 million strong rural population will settle down.
Harvesting sunflowers in Gansu province, Sept. 11, 2013. (Photo/Xinhua) |
China's sweeping hukou reform will grant 100 million migrant workers equal access to urban social welfare by 2020, but many have started to wonder where the 100 million strong rural population will settle down.
Will they
flock to already over-crowded mega cities like Beijing and Shanghai, where
increasing population will further strain urban resources? Or will they become
residents of China's smaller cities, which would be better able to accommodate
them but provide fewer job opportunities?
The State
Council, the Cabinet, issued the most comprehensive guideline for the newest
reforms to the hukou or household registration system, on July 30.
To ensure
orderly migration of the 100 million migrant workers, the guideline asks local
governments to set differentiated household registration policies based on
their ability to absorb migrants and provide public services.
Under the
guideline, migrants can settle in towns and small cites with populations under
500,000 freely, with previous hukou restrictions abolished. For medium-sized
cities with populations between 500,000 and 1 millon, however, controls have
been set in hopes of establishing an orderly resettlement of rural population.
More
conditions apply for big cities of with populations between 3 million and 5
million, and movement into cities with more than 5 million people will be
strictly controlled.
Primary
conditions include legally being employed at a stable job for a certain period
and owning or renting a residence in the city they wish to move to.
China's
hukou system is tied to one's place of residence and was set up in 1958 to
control movement of rural population into cities. The hukou system has
prevented the country's 269 million migrant workers from receiving the same
public benefits as people with urban hukous and is felt to hold back the
urbanization and domestic consumption that the government sees as China's
growth engine for the future.
The new
guideline says China will implement a single household registration, scrapping
the nominal distinction between rural and urban hukou, but the benefits tied to
hukou of different areas still exist with more developed areas providing better
public services.
The
differentiated hukou relocation policies are based on three socioeconomic
factors, Huang Ming, vice minister of the Public Security Ministry, told Xinhua
After years
of rapid urbanization, with 52.6% of the population living in cities last year,
imbalances have arisen in the process. While more industrialized eastern areas
are under increasing environmental strains, middle and western regions are
still underdeveloped; the industrialization potential of underpopulated small
cities have yet to be realized; and mega cities suffer from excessive
populations, causing deteriorating "urban malaise" such air pollution
and traffic jams.
For
instance, migration has stretched Beijing's capacity to the extreme. According
to official figures, Beijing's population increased by 87% from 1990 to 2011,
reaching 20.18 million. Among the new residents, 7.42 million are migrants. The
surge in population means Beijing now has to import its natural gas and fuel
supply, as well as 64% of its power.
Wang
Xiaoguang, an expert with the Chinese Academy of Governance, said
differentiated policies could serve the goal of encouraging development of
middle and western areas. At the same time, these policies are necessary, given
the fact relocating to big cities costs much more.
After 15
years in the booming province of Guangdong, migrant worker Liu Yong finally
decided to settle in Longshe township near his hometown in southwest Chongqing
municipality. Liu, a former villager from Dadi village, bought a new house in
the town in 2010 and relocated his hukou from his rural home to the town.
The reason
for his move is simple. Settling down in the nearby town is affordable and
allows him to live near his relatives. The same year, the housing price in
Guangzhou, capital city of Guangdong, soared beyond Liu's financial reach.
Chongqing,
as one of the two pilot hukou-reform regions in China, abolished its hukou
restrictions in 2010. So far, nearly 4 million migrant workers have relocated
their household registrations to urban areas, with 70% of them choosing to
settle in towns and small cities. This shows migrant workers are more likely to
relocate to more livable and affordable small cities.
Zhang
Xiaode, another professor with the Chinese Academy of Governance, said setting
employment and residence requirements for hukou relocation can prevent rural
populations from flooding into cities, which could cause slums and widespread
unemployment in cities.
According
to a survey, about 50% of China's migrant workers who have entered cities work
in counties and small cities. Keeping this in mind, the government has planned
to invest more in infrastructure in small cities so they can attract more
migrant workers to settle down.
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