China says
100 million farmers to move to cities by 2020
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Oct 10, 2011
More than 100 million Chinese farmers will move to cities by 2020,
posing huge challenges for urban planners and already stretched
social welfare systems, according to a new official forecast.
China has seen an unprecedented wave of urbanisation as millions
of migrant workers have flooded cities to provide the cheap labour
that has helped the world's second-largest economy achieve
breakneck growth.
A new government report released to some state media on Sunday
said the urban population would top 800 million by 2020, up from
666 million in 2010, as more rural Chinese sought better incomes
in the cities.
China's rapid urbanisation is already creating social problems,
with migrant workers often treated as second-class citizens, and
the National Population and Family Planning Commission report
called for "equal public services" for all.
Despite living in cities, migrant workers are still registered as
rural residents. As such, they have little or no social security
and are charged huge fees to send their children to public
schools, forcing some to forgo education.
Unlike their parents, young migrant workers -- the second
generation -- are aware of their rights, and they are increasingly
frustrated with the treatment they receive in cities.
In June, three days of riots in the southern province of Guangdong
broke out after rumours spread that police had beaten a street
hawker to death and manhandled his pregnant wife.
The protests in the manufacturing hub were the latest in a line of
incidents of unrest, which analysts say highlight the frustration
felt by migrants over what they see as unfair treatment and anger
at the widening wealth gap.
The government forecast was based on a survey of migrant
populations in 106 cities last year.
It found that 20 percent of migrant families spend more than they
earn, while fewer than half have any medical insurance or pension
provisions.
It also showed the new generation of migrant workers -- born
between 1980 and 1994 -- were better educated than their
predecessors, with five percent educated to college level.