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Urban poor receiving 7.1b cash help ( 2003-07-28 06:40) (China Daily)
All levels of government have teamed up to dole out more than 7.1 billion yuan (US$855.42 million) during the first half of this year to help more than 21 million Chinese urban residents who are living below the minimum standard of living.
The 231-yuan stipend issued in Beijing (US$27.8) was the highest average per capita monthly allowance of all provinces, municipalities and autonomous regions. Shanghai ranks second with 138 yuan (US$16.63), while the lowest figure was 35 yuan (US$4.22) in North China's Hebei Province. With a pilot programme started in Shanghai in 1993, the basic living allowance has now spread across China and stands as the most basic form of governmental social assistance. The minimum standard of living varies in different regions, depending on the local costs of living. All urban households with a per capita income below the standard are eligible for the stipend. Over the past three years, official investment in the programme has witnessed rapid increases, with contributions from central and local governments totalling only 3.76 billion yuan (about US$453 million) in 2000. Urban poverty mainly is considered to stem from enterprise restructuring
about 10 years ago, when the phenomenon of laying off workers and unemployment
appeared in China.
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