Premier Wen Jiabao promised Monday to spend
more on boosting incomes in China's poor countryside and protecting the
environment as he announced budget plans for 2007.
The government also will maintain controls meant to contain a surge in
housing prices, Wen said in a speech at the opening of the annual session of
China's legislature.
China's leaders must "safeguard social fairness and justice and ensure that
all of the people share in the fruits of reform and development," Wen said.
Total spending by China's central governments will rise 14.4 percent to 2.7
trillion yuan (US$335 billion; euro265 billion), Wen said.
The premier announced an economic growth target of 8 percent, well below last
year's expansion rate of 10.7 percent, amid efforts to avert a runaway
expansion.
In the countryside, spending on agriculture, schools, medical clinics and
other programs will rise by 15 percent to 391.7 billion yuan (US$51 billion;
euro39 billion), Wen announced.
"Agriculture, the base of the economy, remains weak, and it is now more
difficult than ever to steadily increase grain production and keep rural incomes
growing," he said.
The government will promote environmental protection and energy efficiency by
shutting down small power plants and antiquated facilities in the steel, cement
and aluminum industries, Wen said.
Chinese leaders are trying to improve energy efficiency to reduce both
environmental damage and China's reliance on imported oil, which they see as a
strategic weakness.
China is one of the world's biggest consumers of oil and coal, and uses
several times as much energy per unit of economic output as the United States,
Japan and other countries.
Wen gave no specifics of conservation efforts, but said the government will
use market forces, pricing and taxes "to promote energy saving and environmental
protection."
The premier warned that China still faces strains from the financial
imbalances caused by its surging trade surplus and excess liquidity in its
financial system. But he announced no new trade initiatives.