China's 'common prosperity' push does not mean 'killing the rich',
official says
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[August 26, 2021] By
Gabriel Crossley
BEIJING (Reuters) -China's drive for
"common prosperity", as President Xi Jinping aims to ease inequality in
the world's second-largest economy, does not mean "killing the rich to
help the poor", an official from the ruling Communist Party said on
Thursday.
China must also "guard against falling into the trap of welfarism", Han
Wenxiu, an official at the central financial and economic affairs
commission, told a briefing in Beijing.
Those who "get rich first" should help those behind, but hard work
should be encouraged, he said.
"We cannot wait for help, rely on others for help, or beg for help. We
cannot support layabouts."
Investors have been rattled by a series of measures, including a
crackdown on several industries, that are in part aimed at curbing
cost-of-living pressures, as well as tightening anti-monopoly rules and
data protections.
Han said recent policies regulating internet companies aimed at
irregularities and illegal behaviour, and "absolutely" did not target
private companies or foreign companies.
Reforms four decades ago that unleashed China's market economy enabled
the accumulation of vast personal wealth, with hundreds of billionaires
minted in the still avowedly socialist country, deepening inequality,
especially between urban and rural areas.
The high cost of urban living, meanwhile, has contributed to a sharp
slowdown in births, prompting China this year to allow families to have
up to three children instead of two. Slowing economic growth and
cutthroat competition have also prompted some young urbanites to embrace
a passive attitude known as "lying flat".
EXCESSIVE INCOMES
Legal income should be protected but China should "rationally adjust
excessively high" incomes, according to a meeting chaired by Xi earlier
this month. High-income groups and firms are also being encouraged to
contribute more to society.
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A view of the city skyline from the Shanghai Financial Center
building, October 25, 2011. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
Charitable giving should be encouraged through taxation policies and can
improve the "distribution structure", but donations were "not
compulsory", Han added.
Several tech industry heavyweights have recently announced major charitable
donations and support for disaster relief efforts. Online gaming giant Tencent
Holdings said this month it would spend 50 billion yuan ($7.71 billion) to
promote "common prosperity."
"More big corporations are going to set up social responsibility funds if they
have yet to do so, and the size of donations from them should increase," Iris
Pang, chief economist for Greater China at ING, said in a note this week.
"Corporates need to take bigger steps to enhance their corporate governance and
social responsibility. They need to work to get ahead of the regulators."
China's wealthy eastern province of Zhejiang, which is a "demonstration zone"
for common prosperity, also announced Thursday that by 2025, rural residents
should have on average annual disposable incomes of 44,000 yuan per year.
That compares with average nationwide rural disposable incomes of just over
17,000 yuan in 2020, according to official data.
($1 = 6.4830 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Gabriel Crossley; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Tomasz Janowski)
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