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China's New Farm Policies Have Modest Impact
Fred Gale

Francis Tuan, USDA/ERS
In a reversal of its longstanding practice of taxing farmers, the Chinese
Government introduced direct subsidies to grain producers in 2004
and announced plans to eliminate its centuries-old agricultural
tax. China also offered subsidies for seed and machinery purchases,
boosted spending on rural infrastructure, extended more loans to
farmers, and continued a program of domestic grain market liberalization.
These policies are intended to address the country’s widening
urban-rural income gap and boost grain production. So far, the changes
have had limited impact, but China may introduce policies with stronger
incentives in coming years.
The new policies are symbolically important, but modest in size
and impact. The grain subsidies of $1.4 billion were spread over
140 million farms and amount to less than 2 percent of the value
of grain production. Elimination of the agricultural tax is worth
$5 to $7 billion, spread over some 200 million households, and will
take place over several years. The combined benefits of subsidies
and tax relief in 2004 are estimated to be about $5 per rural household
member.
Rural income and grain production in China did rise sharply during
2004, but the gains were due mostly to a combination of sharply
higher farm prices and vigorous economic growth that boosted nonfarm
earnings. The policies resulted in only modest increases in income
for most rural families. The subsidies provided little incentive
to plant more grain since they were in most cases based on historical
grain plantings.
China's agricultural policy
will evolve as policymakers try to balance multiple objectives and
fine-tune policies. In early 2005, China announced that it will
continue granting subsidies, speed up the elimination of the agricultural
tax, limit increases in input prices, and set support prices for
some grains. China also announced its intentions to place greater
emphasis on raising grain yields by improving plant breeding and
to raise investment in infrastructure. China may also adjust its
subsidy methods. China has experimented with price- and production-linked
subsidy policies in limited geographic areas, and such policies
could be used more widely if policymakers believe that farmers need
stronger incentives to produce grain.
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This article is drawn from...
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China’s
New Farm Subsidies, by Fred Gale, Bryan Lohmar, and Francis
Tuan, WRS-05-01, USDA, Economic Research Service, February 2005.
The ERS China Briefing Room.
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