Home / 30 Years of Reform & Opening / News Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read | Comment
China village famed for farm reform hopes for influx of young talent
Adjust font size:

"Going begging meant you had guts, which was regarded as a guarantee of feeding your family, a prerequisite to be accepted by a girl," Yan Lichang of Xiaogang Village recalled half-jokingly.

"I went out begging in my early thirties, almost every year," he said.

Before 1978, Xiaogang in east China's Anhui Province was infamous for its poverty. Most local families had to roam the countryside begging after the autumn harvest, Yan, now 64, said.

After the Communist Party took over in 1949, land was redistributed to farmers. But in the 1950s, the farmers had to work the land in collective farms.

The village had only 120 people before 1958 and 67 villagers died of hunger during the Great Leap Forward from 1958-60. In Fengyang County, where Xiaogang is located, one in four people perished, or 90,000 in all.

"Begging is humiliating and I never got much," Yan said. "Since I would have starved to death, I had nothing to lose by signing the agreement."

"The agreement" Yan mentioned was signed one night in November 1978, when 18 villagers of Xiaogang, including Yan, risked their lives to sign a secret pact that divided the then People's Commune-owned farmland into family plots.

This move, if seen as "capitalist", could have meant severe punishment. Thus, on that secret agreement covered with the villagers' seals and red fingerprints, there was a line saying: "If any word about this is divulged and the team leader is put in prison, other team members shall share the responsibility to bring up his child till he (or she) is 18."

Yan, a father of two, didn't even tell his wife and was frightened by every knock on the door.

History proved the villagers right, however. The "household contract responsibility system" fired the locals' enthusiasm for farm production.

The grains that a local farmer turned over to the state the very next year almost totaled the figure of the previous two decades, recalled Yan Hongchang, one of the 18 Xiaogang villagers.

Their practice was later supported by Deng Xiaoping, chief architect of China's reform and opening-up drive, and recognized by the government. Xiaogang has become known as the pace-setter of the nation's rural reform.

In the early 1980s, the contract responsibility system, modeled after Xiaogang village's program, came into being. The new system, which also allowed farmers to sell their excess produce in private markets after fulfilling their official quotas to the commune, was a success that saw farmers increasing their incomes tremendously.

Thanks to the reform, China can finally feed 21 percent of the global population with less than 10 percent of the world's arable land.

1   2   3    


Tools: Save | Print | E-mail | Most Read
Comment
Pet Name
Anonymous
China Archives
Related >>
- Trade deficit of farm produce rockets
- Prices of farm produce extend decline
- Farm produce prices fall 0.6% despite rain
- Farm product, seafood safety improving
- Farm subsidies to help post-disaster reconstruction
- Rural reform sees tremendous changes in farmers' lives
- Rural reform sees tremendous changes in farmers' lives
- CPC session approves decision on rural reform, development