| Balance school
budgets: experts (03/17/2003)
Primary schools in China's rural areas need more central government
funding, especially in the wake of tax-for-fee reforms which have
cut local education budgets, top legislators and political advisers
said.
Dozens of motions on the shortfall in rural education funding and
on revisions to the Compulsory Education Law have been received
by the 10th National People's Congress.
Wu Zhengde, a member of the 10th National Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference, said the State must
promote the "balanced development of compulsory education"
in the country.
He said it was unfair that elementary schools in different regions
were treated differently.
Wu stated that inappropriate distribution of government funding
was a major factor behind regional imbalances in the development
of compulsory education.
Wu suggested that both the central and provincial governments increase
their educational spending in poor and underdeveloped areas, to
narrow the regional gap in school resources.
Primary and middle schools in rural China are funded by local county,
township and village governments, leading to sharp differences in
school budgets depending on the local authorities' tax income, according
to Jiang Zhongyi, a researcher from the Research Centre of the Rural
Economy under the Ministry of Agriculture.
"The conditions have worsened since last March, when a special
surcharge on rural education - the main source of compulsory education
funding in rural China - was abolished," Jiang told China Daily.
The abolition of the charge is part of the tax-for-fee reform in
rural areas, which aims to ease the financial burden on farmers.
Many areas are still to decide how else they will raise their education
funding, eroding staff confidence in future investment in schools,
said Jiang, after investigating the situation in Northwest China's
Gansu Province and Central China's Henan, Hunan and Hubei provinces.
But the researcher said he is satisfied with a regulation issued
last year which ensured the salaries of teachers in rural areas
would be funded by the county-level government. The financial gap
in some poverty-stricken counties will be covered by the central
government.
"The policy is the most effective support so far for compulsory
education in rural areas," said Jiang.
The researcher noted the gap in educational funding will make it
more difficult to increase farmers' incomes and predicted it would
become the most serious obstacle to eliminating the inequalities
between urban and rural areas.
Ren Jichang, an NPC deputy and principal of the Hangzhou Xuejun
Middle School in East China's Zhejiang Province, proposed setting
up a special national fund to provide housing, staff and books for
poor rural schools.
Another motion, proposed by 34 participants and headed by NPC deputy
Zhang Xinshi, recommended the central government return surpluses
from value-added and consumption taxes to county governments with
annual per capita gross domestic product (GDP) of less than US$800,
as special funding for compulsory education in rural areas.
In a guideline on education reform issued in 1994, the central
government mapped out a plan to increase spending on education to
4 per cent of GDP by 2000. But it stands at only 3.3 per cent now.
(China Daily)
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