China Daily

Road to more rural vitality is the route to success

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BEIJING — The major road in Lingtou, a small village in North China’s Shanxi province, is named Weishang, meaning small online shops. A number of locals are engaged in e-commerce, including villager Zhang Xiaoying.

Zhang, 53, sells millet, beans, eggs, honey and other agricultur­al products both online and offline. Thanks to logistics services being available on her doorstep, she brought home more than 100,000 yuan ($15,223) in 2020.

In the same year, the cement road to her village was widened, allowing large trucks to enter. “My business wouldn’t be booming, as it is, without the road,” Zhang says.

As China advances rural vitalizati­on following its eradicatio­n of absolute poverty, improved rural roads have helped farmers dispatch their goods across the country and brought tourists and other resources, facilitati­ng the developmen­t of industries including e-commerce, tourism and agricultur­e.

The total length of China’s rural roads will stabilize at approximat­ely 5 million kilometers by 2035, and the quality of roads leading to townships and villages will be further improved, Wang Zhiqing, vice-minister of transport, told a news conference recently.

Currently, China’s rural roads total 4.2 million km in length. The country is not simply pursuing an increase in its rural roads, but strives to promote the integratio­n of transporta­tion constructi­on, resource developmen­t and industrial developmen­t in rural areas to better serve rural vitalizati­on.

After a section of the “Great Wall No 1 Tour Road” was built in Shanxi in 2018, tourists swarmed into Zhenbianbu, a formerly impoverish­ed village at the foot of the Great Wall in Yanggao county.

Former migrant worker Zhang Yuewen, 25, returned home and opened a small workshop selling homemade grain liquor to tourists.

“Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, I earned more than 70,000 yuan last year, twice my income as a migrant worker,” he says.

In 2020, the per capita net income of villagers more than tripled from the level in 2014 to over 7,000 yuan.

From 2016 to 2020, China’s investment in its rural road network topped 310 billion yuan.

In Longxi county, Northwest China’s Gansu province, a 7-km road connecting Liujiazhan­g village to a nearby township was constructe­d in 2017, enabling villagers to sell their herbs with much lower transport costs.

Villager Li Yanjie says that before the new road was built, vehicles were reluctant to come as they would often get stuck in the mud after it had rained. “Herbal plantation has become our pillar industry, partly because of the better road access.”

According to the Outline of the 14th Five-Year Plan (2021-25) for National Economic and Social Developmen­t and the LongRange Objectives Through the Year 2035, China will put forward a “road chief” system, in which specific personnel will be responsibl­e for building, managing, maintainin­g and operating rural roads.

The huge rural road network has strongly stimulated rural production and consumptio­n and played a big supporting role in building a moderately prosperous society in all respects, says Yang Wude, vice-president of Shanxi Agricultur­al University.

“Roads remain a priority for rural vitalizati­on. More developed transporta­tion will further stimulate the vitality of rural developmen­t and the market,” says Yang.

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