Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-10-20
China will pilot a set of reforms aimed at giving farmers greater property rights to allow them to enjoy more benefits of the country's urbanization drive.
A happy corn farmer in Changchun, Jilin province. (File photo/Xinhua) |
China will pilot a set of reforms aimed at giving farmers greater property rights to allow them to enjoy more benefits of the country's urbanization drive.
In an
interview with Xinhua on Saturday, vice minister of agriculture Chen Xiaohua
said the pilot plan, recently approved by the central authorities, will explore
diversified forms of collective ownership of rural land to better protect the
interests of farmers.
In China,
urban land is owned by the state and rural land is normally under collective
ownership. While gradual reforms since the 1980s saw the trading of urban land
evolve into a robust property market, land in the countryside has remained
largely static as farmers generally have the right to use the land but cannot
directly trade or mortgage it.
This
scenario has put farmers in a vulnerable position and a key reform meeting last
year pledged to gradually change the situation.
While
implementing the most strict policies to protect arable land, the country will
grant farmers rights to possess, use, benefit from and transfer their
contracted land, as well as the right to use land ownership as collateral or a
guarantee, said a document released after the Third Plenary Session of the 18th
Communist Party of China Central Committee held last November.
As a
follow-up to the document, the latest policy specified procedures to allow
farmers to transform their collective rights into a shareholding system.
Chen said
the key is to accelerate registration and confirmation of land rights. China
started a pilot registration program in 2008, and the country aims to roll out
the scheme nationwide in 2015.
Meanwhile,
China will actively grant farmers the right to possess and benefit from their
contracted land, allow them to give up or inherit land use rights under certain
conditions, as well as cautiously roll out experiments on the leasing and
mortgaging of the rights, according to Chen.
Giving
consideration to the differentiated conditions in east, central and west China,
authorities will select several counties to pilot the reforms and aim to
complete the work by the end of 2017.
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