The 17th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) started
its third plenary session yesterday to discuss important changes in rural reform
and development policies.
A draft of the Central Committee decision on major issues concerning rural
reform and development would be deliberated at the four-day meeting, said a
statement issued after the session opening.
The document is expected to guide reform and development in rural areas.
Before the session, the draft was reviewed by senior Party members and advisors
from various walks of society, including delegates to the 17th CPC National
Congress, and amended according to their proposals.
The CPC leadership agreed that changes and problems had occurred in the
countryside where economic reform started 30 years ago, the statement said.
Based on the changing reality, advancing rural reform would be a key step for
the country, it said. This would also lay the foundation for China's development
strategy.
On Sept. 30, President Hu Jintao, general secretary of the CPC Central
Committee, visited Xiaogang village in eastern Anhui Province. In 1978, a group
of villagers there decided to adopt a household contract responsibility system,
which entrusted the management and production of public owned farmlands to
individual households through long-term contracts.
Later the system, described by then Chinese leader Deng Xiaoping "a great
invention of Chinese farmers", was widely adopted across the country and
triggered the economic reform.
Hu's visit has underscored the importance the government has placed on the
issues of farmland management and rural development.