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Urban hukou, or rural land? Migrant workers face dilemma

2010-03-10 17:44 BJT

Special Report: 2010 NPC & CPPCC Sessions |

by Xinhua writers Yan Hao and Li Yanan

BEIJING, March 10 (Xinhua) -- Hu Xiaoyan, one of China's first three national legislators who represent the country's millions of migrant workers, has had her official residency status transferred from her rural hometown in Sichuan to the city she now works in Guangdong.

To become an urban citizen, Hu had to surrender her farm plot back in her hometown.

For this reason many migrant workers who have the opportunity to change their residency status, or hukou, to become urban citizens have second thoughts. They do not want to give up their small plots of land.

Deputies from southern Guangdong Province to the annual session of the National People's Congress (NPC), the top legislature, said at their panel discussion that local municipality's policy to attract migrant workers to settle down was not always welcomed by all the new-comers.

Guangdong's Zhongshan City has introduced a series of local policies and regulations to attract migrant workers to settle down by offering urban residency status.

According to Li Qihong, an NPC deputy and Zhongshan's mayor, more than 30,000 migrant workers working in the city are eligible to become urban citizens, but less than 200 of them have changed their hukou in 2009.

Chinese rural residents have been migrating to towns and cities since the late 1970s when the opening up and reform policy meant less farmers were needed to work on the land.

Currently, about 150 million migrant workers in cities, mainly working as temporary building labors and in the service industry, miss out on benefits linked to urban hukou, regarding education, housing and health among others.

"The plots of land under our names in our hometowns are probably the sticking point," Hu said.

"Many migrant workers are not willing to give up their land. Although the local government is improving the social security system, many migrant workers believe if all else fails they can still go back and make a living from the land," Hu said.

However, if those migrant workers do not obtain an urban hukou, they must pay much more for their children's schooling and their medical fees.

As the central government is determined to narrow the development gap between rural and urban populations by accelerating the country's urbanization process, the migrant workers have to make a decision about their hukou.

Premier Wen Jiabao has vowed in his work report during the ongoing NPC session that the government will promote the urbanization and construction of rural communities, propel reform of the hukou system by loosening requirements for migrants to obtain residency status in medium and small cities and towns.

The migrant workers' hesitation in giving up their rural residence status is well understood by Zhai Weidong, the Party secretary of Chengliu town in Jiyuan City, central Henan Province, a major source of migrant workers.