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中国农村合作化运动及其解体 (The Collectivizationa and De-collectivization in Rural China)/周大勇

作者:法律资料网 时间:2024-07-03 01:30:54  浏览:8477   来源:法律资料网
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Student:Dayong Zhou

dayong_77@hotmail.com


The Collectivizationa and De-collectivization in Rural China

周大勇 (Zhou,Dayong)

Abstract: the process of de-collectivization took place 25 years ago, however it was uncompleted, which determined that china has to make great effort to continue his rural reform, in order to liberate the peasant and the status of rural region as the Party promised. In China, the non-privatization reform occurred along with the de-collectivization was a uncompleted reform, which remains the defects of both collectivization and small-scale peasant economy, therefore it restricts the development of the rural society, however, the current system seems unable also reluctantly to change it. This paper intents to introduce the process of the collectivization and the most important rural reform in this century, namely the de-collectivization, the demonstrates the progression of de-collectivization, its characters as well as the problems left to be solve.
Keywords: collectivization De-collectivization collective ownership incomplete

Foreword
I am pleased that I am allowed to write the term paper about China. China was influenced by Marxism and walked in detour of history for half century. Before Marxism bankrupted in former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe countries, China had adopted a different way to reform from those countries. Because of the difference in aspects of historical evolution, political forms and natural environment, it’s hard to compare the rural society of China with these former socialism countries directly, also, the progression of collectivization and its end are different in two continents.
Rural china before collectivization
Collectivization was a mark system of the socialist state. Although in the era of Utopian socialism, Robert Owen for example has already attempted to set up the collective farm, but it wasn’t pursued by force strength of government. Even the founder of communism Marx didn’t agree that communism could be realized in undeveloped countries with extremely poor productivity . It was Russia, the serf country, in which Communist took power without adequate preparation; collectivization was implemented by force, in order to consolidate the rule in grass-root countryside. This experience has influenced China and Eastern Europe, because one of the merits of the collectivization lies in being easy to be managed, the other lies in being easy to deprive peasants.
China was a backward country, which suffered from ignorance and war for centuries. Throughout the centuries some 80 to 90 percent of the Chinese population were farmers and live in one of some 900,000 villages, which have an average population of from 1,000 to 2,000 people. Villages were not self-contained, self-sufficient units. Clusters of villages centered on small market towns, which linked them to the wider economy and society by providing not only opportunities to buy and sell but also opportunities for entertainment, information, social life, and a host of specialized services. The traditional Chinese elite, often referred to in English as the gentry dispersed across the country and often lived in rural areas, where they were the dominant figures on the local scene, normally ruled villages. Although they held land, which they rented to tenant farmers, they neither possessed large estates like European nobles nor held hereditary titles. However, they traditionally interpreted central policies and national values for villagers. As in feudal relationship, the peasants and gentry live depend on each other. Gentry provided land to poor peasants and tenant, and work with rich and middle peasants to secure the order in village, for instance opening school and building basic infrastructures to maintain there social status. In Chinese history, at the beginning of very dynasty, the land relationship between landlord and poor peasants were comparably fair, that meant, peasant have parcel farmland to live on. But land tended to be concentrated on end every dynasty, then there might be a peasant uprising led to a new dynasty and retribution of land. This is the basic clue of social evolution in China before communist period.
After the Chinese Communist Party came into power in mainland, it had to keep its promise, which it made during the period of war to encourage the peasant to join the army, that it would gave peasant their own land. The first major action took place from 1940s to early 1950s. June 1950, a new Land Reform Law of new People’s Republic was promulgated and stipulated nullification of the feudal land ownership system, and institutionalization of the system of land ownership by peasants, in which the Party sent agents to every village to carry out the land reform policy. This in itself was an unprecedented show of political power and the resolution of transform an old society. The reform was successful, because the peasants supported the policy; most of them had been waiting for the reform for long time. In the light of the reform law, land were redistribute from the landlords, land-owning trusts or wealthier families to the poor segments in the same village; village elites, who might be expected to go up against the Party and its programs were brought down; new leadership was established by poor peasants who showed the most loyalty to the party's goals; instead of kinship group or patron-client ties, class status became new relationship among villagers.
the process of Collectivization
However, the Party’s leaders were not satisfied with the privatization of land, at one hand, such ownership, according to the doctrine of socialism, should have been abolished in the state of socialism, at another hand, private ownership of small peasantry had no function of property accumulation for the country. At that time, in order to accelerate the construction of socialism, China had launched The First Five-Year Plan after the Soviet model; heavy industry development was profound stressed since the leaders of Communist Party regard socialist country as a country with developed industry sectors. However, the situation in early 1950s was not ideal for a new country. Pressing of needs for food in a country with burgeoning population, domestic capital for investment, and purchase of Soviet-supplied technology, capital equipment, and military hardware. To satisfy these needs, collectivize agriculture was put forward. Collectivization was regard as a method to turn countryside to stabile backing, which can be managed as semi-military and had rare contact with outside, so that the government could press the price of agricultural products by means of scissors difference between cities and countryside, and seize huge numbers of profit from agriculture economies to support the industrialization in city. At the same time, the government had already nationalized banking, industry, and even trade. Private enterprise was already virtually abolished in national wide.
Despite internal disagreement as to the speed of collectivization, preliminary collectivization was launched since 1952. China's peasantry saw Chairman Mao and the Communist Party as heroic much more than Russia's peasantry had seen Stalin and the Bolsheviks as heroes, and through 1956 the peasantry cooperated with the Party. There was none of the resistance and warfare that had accompanied the collectivization of agriculture in the Soviet Union.
The collectivization of agriculture was basically completed with the establishment of the people's communes in 1958. The People’s Commune system was defined as a unity of politics and production, in which all members of the commune jointly owned property. Essentially, the commune system was based on private contract of its members and the principle of voluntaries and mutual benefit, however, it turned out yet as coercive institutional arrangement, which was made by government with political power. In the movement to achieve the People’ s Commune, peasants had no choice whether or not to join.
Communes were designed as large, embracing scores of villages created by combining some 20 or 30 advanced producers' cooperatives of 20,000 to 30,000 members on average, in some cases the membership varied from as few as 6,000 to over 40,000. It was instituted as an organization with functions of the lowest level of local government and the highest level of organization in agricultural production. Communes consisted of three organizational levels: the central commune administration; the production brigade , and the production team, which generally consisted of around thirty families. This kind of institution was an organization of hierarchies, in which the commune acted as political unit and top manager, the brigades played role of co-coordinators between the commune and the basic production teams. The production team was basic units of production and accounting. Since the people’s commune system was a tool established to extract resources from agriculture sector for industrialization, as a result, it neglected peasants’ incentive completely. In order to let the people’s commune system run, the central government designed an relative effective mechanism to encourage managers in each hierarchy to work enthusiastically, yet, in each level, the managers were treated differently and there was a clear difference in aspects of identity and welfare between the managers of the commune and of the brigades or production teams.
The commune was defined as administrative organ and executed the central government’s orders, and paid from central government’s budget, therefore the managers in the level of commune were “state cadres” , that means they were formal governmental officials and got wage monthly. These state cadres could be promoted and became officials of governmental divisions in higher level. Brigades and production teams were collective economic organizations, their running expenses came from production teams’ tribute. Managers in brigades level were called “collective cadres” . They were remunerated in their own production teams according to their labor quotas. Their wage was paid in the form of products instead of money. Managers in production teams were“team cadres”, they were also members of the production team. They worked as peasant like their workmates, and were paid in products according to labor quotas. Team cadres could be promoted to collective cadres. Collective and team cadres had little possibilities to be promoted and became members of state cadres. Nevertheless, as collective and team cadres had some privileges. For example, collective managers had the power of assigning state’s delivery quotas and production tasks among production teams, they determined who could enrolled in state-owned factories, universities and army. The production team managers executed the power of assigning work and distributing products among collective members. Furthermore, in the period of many political movements and class struggles, the identity of cadre could protect their families, relatives and themselves from being denounced and bullied (Tan, 1999).
At beginning, the commune itself was decorated as the representation of socialist society and had all merits of public ownership. Although nearly all the private property had been deprived, peasants had to praise the new system profusely. it was true, most poor peasants found that their lives changed, by eating in the public dining they didn’t need to worry about their own budget anymore, and by working together, they were not necessary to try their best. Following propaganda appeared in newspapers everyday:
The public dining halls are distributed in a way that members need walk only a few minutes from their homes to take their meals. On the freshly whitewashed walls of the one on Shihfuchien Street, a typical establishment, there is a big slogan in red, which reads, "High Spirits for Higher Production!" Its kitchen, to which the visitor is drawn by the aroma of food and the clatter of pots, is managed by Tu Hsiu-chen, the first volunteer cook, who has since learned large-scale catering from the chef at one of the city's restaurants.
The walls of the spacious dining room are decorated with paintings, as a home might be. Its tables and chairs, though simple, are scrubbed to a shining cleanliness. The food is fresh and tasty -- vegetables are grown by the commune itself. The staff make a special point of studying the diet and preferences of old people, children, nursing mothers and members with ailments. There is a separate room for parents with small children, provided with low tables for the little ones.( People’s Daily, 1958)
However, in practice, this ideal, extremely centralized form commune didn’t keep running well in most areas. Very soon it became clear that in most cases the communes were too clumsy to carry out successfully all the managerial and administrative functions that were assigned to them. The cooperative led to low-efficiency, the advantages of large-scale productivity didn’t arrive as peasants anticipated, productivity began to drop and discontent emerged. The reason lies in insufficient utilization of resources and lack of incentive of peasants. At one hand, the output of cooperation comes from all members’ work, in which the tribute of single household is difficult to be measured. So that opportunism like shirking happened naturally very frequently. An effective way to prevent shirking is to have all members supervised, but the seasonal work and spatial diversity of agricultural productive activities make it difficult to totally supervise. At the other hand, although brigade and production team cadres were obliged to complete state’s planning and all kinds of deliveries, the control right and residual claim of the people’s commune system were in the state’s hand, these cadres at grass-level could not design any reasonable incentive mechanism to encourage peasants to work hard and produce according to reasonable natural condition, such as soil, irrigation and farm year. The way left for brigade and team cadres was to punish peasants by struggling against them or maltreatment. But the brigade and team cadres also belonged to members of production teams, they and their families lived in the same community with their subordinates as well, so punishing peasants could also make themselves in trouble. Moreover, under the property rights structure of the commune system, the rest of output was not belong to the commune, brigade or even production team, but to the governments of higher level. This made the supervisors’ effort unrelated to any reward. As a result, even the supervisor himself has not enough incentive to work and shirk himself sometimes. In a word, under such conditions of poor supervision, in which all the work was distributed equally among all members at the lowest level--production team, shirking became every member’s rational choice and further weakening the efficiency of the system (Lin,1990).
De-collectivization
To prevent peasants from slow down, shrinking and escaping in work, and assure the system could keep on moving, the party collected all productive equipments and forbid members in people’s commune engaging in private production and business on the one hand, and at same time deprived peasants’ right of migrating from countryside to city or between districts by means of household registration on the other hand. Nevertheless, such policies had no effect on improving incentive of peasants, but they formed at least political press on very member of people’s commune, because it turned out that everyone’s only routine is to stay in the commune and finish one’s task. Without the right to leave or get better than others, peasants commonly chose to work with little effort, e.g. a passive method, to evade production tasks assigned by leader. Little accumulation and shirking made countryside widely fall into poverty , rare rural region had good conditions to develop industry or to improve commerce, infrastructures went worse, productivity sank quickly. The most serious crisis for agricultural collectivization happened between 1959 and 1961. GNP decreased from 213.8 billion Yuan in 1958 to 180.0 billion Yuan in 1962, with an average annual reduction of 15.1% in gross industrial production value and an average annual reduction of 19.3% in gross agricultural production value from 1958 to 1960. Owing to the serious shortage of food, a great famine took place in the whole country and at least 30 million residents died (Tan, 2000). Discontent with such system broke out, in some areas, peasants didn’t want to relied so heavily on orders from above and made so little allowance for local conditions or local initiative. The severe crisis forced the Party to adjust their policies. From 1961 on, commune functions were reduced to administration and co-ordination, production team was confirmed as the basic unit of accounting, certain production decision making was delegated to production teams, which were allowed to retain some income to overcome problems of egalitarianism; households again allowed to have small private plots and sidelines for planting vegetables, and a limited opening markets for transaction between urban and rural areas. However, these adjustments didn’t mean to change the system of people’s commune, but only to prevent peasants from rebel. From 1966 to 1976 China suffered the disaster of Cultural Revolution , there were large institutional swings took place in this period, in which co-operative moved from small to large and from team to brigade to commune again, local free markets, sidelines and private plots was prohibited again, and political factors had a great influence on production decisions.
In late 1970s, after the Leader Chairman Mao passed away, the requirement for improving agricultural productivity came alive. Administrators in provincial-level units with extensive regions of low yields and consequent low standards of living began experimenting with new forms of tenure and production. To avoid frontal conflicts of wide scope with government’s policies and the main ideology, a gradual approach was adopted. The first step of reform was to divide the production team into groups and to fix yield quotas for each group. Each group signed a contract with production team, the contractual items included the conditions of using land, laborers, farm tools and draft animals, the expenditure, labor contribution, rewards for excessive labor contribution and so on. After completing the tasks assigned by the production team, the output could be distributed among work groups according to their labor quotas. And then, the further solution was put forward, namely the typical form of fixing quotas called “all-round contract”, which was initiated by a few brave peasant secretly in Fengyang county of Anhui province. this contract regulated, household was allowed to cultivated a certain parcel farmland in the group, if grain quotas assigned by the state and the collective accumulation were accomplished, the household could own all the residual output. In the light of the contract, peasants were given directly stimulation to produce. The experiment was deemed successful and popular, and it soon spread to all districts.
At another side, political situation was appropriate with the reform form below. In the Eleventh National Party Congress, held August 12- 18, 1977 proclaimed the formal end of the Cultural Revolution, blamed it entirely on the Gang of Four , and reiterated that "the fundamental task of the party in the new historical period is to build China into a modern, powerful socialist country by the end of the twentieth century." The reformer Deng Xiaoping was elected as vice chairman and back to political stage and suggested a series of reform plans, though many contradictions still were apparent, change of policy was regarded as necessary. Rehabilitations of Deng's associates and others sympathetic to these reform plans were stepped up. Not only were some of those purged during the Cultural Revolution returned to power, but also individuals who had fallen from favor as early as the mid-1950s were rehabilitated. It was a time of increased political activism.
In November 1980, the Central Committee of Communist Party of China issued the document Some Issues of Further Reinforcing and Improving the Responsibility System in Agricultural Production. This article manifest the first time that the Party accepted the production responsibility systems developing in practice. In the document fixed output quotas of farmland for each group and responsibility contracts in some specialized obligations were indicated, at the same time, the fixed output quotas for household was also regarded as positive. Under the encouragement of government’s policy and related support measures, plenty of production responsibility systems developed very rapidly in rural areas. In 1981, a wide deeper reform called fixing the contribute quote for each household (bao gan dao hu), which was much more radical, was implemented. In accordance to the system, all collective lands in production teams were to be distributed among households based on their population or laborers. The households could manage the lands, made production decisions by themselves, and bore the results. When tasks assigned by upper government and the collective accumulation, e.g. a certain quantity of grain and livestock, were completed, the remained products could be owned by the households and not distributed among members in the production team. Moreover, if the household made sure that they have enough ration, they had right to sell the left grain to state owned agricultural enterprises or consume them as they want, usually feeding livestock or making wine for example. That meant the model from Fengyang was finally admitted by Party. In October 1983, the Party and the State Counsel issued the document Notice of Separating the Co-operative from Politics and Setting Up the Township Government and required the cooperative to separate from local government. The act ordered that the people's communes were replaced by administrative townships. By the end of 1984, 98% of production teams had taken the reform of Household Responsibility System. It was until then, the collectivization system was dismantled completely.
Some Characters of De-collectivization and Problems left
No restitution
Yet, de-collectivization and the implement of the household responsibility system is neither a reform of the ownership of land nor a process of privatization. As we have mentioned above, after the Communist Party set up its own government in 1949, it started land reform and distributed lands to the poor from landlords and rich peasants. Peasant acquired parcels of land according to the labor forces, then land were registered under name of each household. Before the eve of collectivization, most of lands in rural China were legally privately owned. But when de-collectivization began, peasants did not get back their former lands again. The household responsibility system only distribute the right of manage and benefit of lands among households according to their population or laborers. So, the de-collectivization in China did not like that in most of East European countries such as Bulgaria, Czech, Hungary, Poland, Romania and Slovakia, but like that in Albania. That is to say, there was no restitution of land. However, in former East European Countries, whether restitution was implemented or not, the de-collectivization had symbiosis with privatization. In China, although during the process of de-collectivization there were in reality some opinions that lands should be restituted, such voices were not accepted, nor even discussed.
The reasons why restitution of land in the de-collectivization of rural China did not happen may lie in some historic reasons. First of all, although peasants in China had private ownership over lands before the collectivization, large percent of peasants owned farmlands that did not belong to them before, they obtain them from political transformation. Theoretically, violence can’t consist the legal reason of transfer of ownership over real estate, therefore even after the terrorize during the land reform at beginning of 1950s, the private ownership of lands, which was made out by the communist government, had not yet became stable and commonly accepted. However, the former landlord class had rooted off during the political movement, land contacts and register books of land title had been destroyed, no one dare to challenge the power of Communist Party anymore. Since the collectivization began soon after the land reform, the new established owner relationship was broken again, when de-collectivization came about, without supports from the central government, most of peasants only took the household responsibility system as another chance of equally distributing lands, just like the land reform in 1949. As to descendants of former landlord class, they might have not forgotten the experience of their poor ancestors’: claiming private right before the Party which regarding public ownership as universal truth is a dangerous deal.
Secondly, different from most country in former communist east European countries , in which farmers’ nominal ownership of lands was remained, even though their lands were requisitioned in collective farms without any payment, and so that it was easy for peasants in these countries to take back the land when the collective farms went over. On the contrary, in China, private ownership of land was totally abolished as soon as the people’s commune system was set up, after 20 years, the collective ownership had already fest basis. As a result, the transaction costs of restitution so high as to wipe it out. That means, even a peasant want to take back the former farmland which belonged to them, it’s very hard to him to collect the relevant evidences to support his claim, moreover, there was no legal justice process to support such application. So normal farmer would rather to accept the Household Responsibility System.
Finally, the key reason lies in the socialism system itself. Even though the Communist Party of had poor performance in leading the country and its people to wealth and happiness during socialist revolution, Chinese people have taken socialism as the characteristic of the country for grant, after all the slogan “ Socialism saved China” has been deeply impressed. So that even after the Culture Revolution, most people still propped up the Party. The Party led the rural reform and decided the de-collectivization. However, the reform is a “liberation of the rural productivity”, which suit the requirement of the Party. Because the Chinese Communist Party insisted that his mission is to realize socialism, and socialism is based on public ownership system. Collective ownership was deemed as one form of public ownership in rural regions, so that as China kept on the road of realizing socialism, “land in rural areas belong to collective” was certainly remained after rural reform, and regulated in the Constitution of 1982, which is valid till now.
At the time of de-collectivization, the dissolution of people’s commune and the wide implement of responsibility system were regard as a great innovation. According to the statistic, The Household Responsibility System did bring about a more prosperous agriculture in China. From 1978 to 1984, grain output in China increased at an annual average rate of 5% and the gross value of agriculture by 7.7% (Lin, 1997). In contrast with former European countries, the de-collectivization seems bring more benefit to Chinese peasants at beginning. So that at that time, rare peasant did realize that such a reform without transformation of ownership was incompletely. However, The natural shortcomings of the de-collectivization would surely bring a series of problems.
institutional problem: land distribution
As we showed above, the de-collectivization ran smoothly and the introduction of Household Responsibility System has got a great success, although it could not address everything as only an institutional innovation. After several years of practice, it has been already proved that there are a number of weaknesses and limitations remained from the incompletely de-collectivization. One has to confirm, that the collective ownership and contract system led to the inequity in both economic and political features.
In economic view, during the de-collectivization, farmland was distributed to individual households in form of fragmented farming units. The principle of land distribution was derived directly from collective ownership. Farmland in a village was owned by all of its members collectively. As a result, every member had equal right to claim on distribution of the land according to certain norm, which was based primarily on the size of the peasant family. In reality of China with abundant population and limited land, the amount can be distributed to each household was very small. Moreover, land differed from each other in terms of soil fertility, irrigation conditions, location and so on. In many cases, a household had to obtain pieces of land from each of the grades. as a result, the sum was not only insufficient but also disjointed and scattered around villages. Large areas of cultivated land were wasted in the form of paths and boundaries separating households' contract field. A survey conducted by the Chinese Ministry of Agriculture indicated that in 1986, among 7983 sample villages from 29 provinces, average cultivated area per household was 0.466 ha (7 mu) fragmented into 5.85 plots, each plot on average 0.08 ha (1.2 mu) (Ministry of Agriculture of China, 1993) . This fragmented structure of family farming has remained largely untouched after implement of contract system and has detained the possibilities of using relatively advanced mechanical agricultural equipment and infrastructures.
Under such system, farmers turned to be short-term in action. According to the distribute rule of land in household responsibility system, land is to distribute depended only on villager status, babies and villagers' new-comer such as newly married bride from other villages were all eligible claimants, which having equal rights to share equal amounts of land in this village; on the contrary, when a villager left or died, the right of land claim would automatically withdraw. As population increased, villages had to readjust the distribution structure, which further subdivided the farmland . The endless redistribution of farmland resulted in many problems, including: 1) the situation of a small and fragmented farming structure further deteriorated; 2) worrying about the risk of losing their land as well as investment, farmers had little incentives to improve land conservation and agricultural infrastructure - irrigated land, one of the most significant components of agricultural infrastructure in China, remained almost unchanged during the 1980s; 3) farmers over-exploited the soil to pursue short-term profits; 4) the course of land redistribution was also costly, it required labor and time in organization and execution. (Chen, 1999)
Another problem is that farmland was generally badly endowed with the appropriate human capital. Since egalitarianism was the general leading principle rule, which gave little consideration to interfamily differences such as labor capability, education and individual preference . As a result, some large households with a incomplete labor force could have comparably much more land to cultivate, meanwhile other smaller households, above all those specialized in agriculture, could have only inadequate land for full employment. Such kind of problem was much worse in rural areas experiencing rapid township or village industry and urbanization. In those region there was often deterioration in the agricultural labor force since most of capable labors tended not to work at home as a farmer. There were many who did not give priority to cultivation and at times even let the land lie unused. Consequently, the farmland was underutilized .
Upon preceding analyzing, we can see that, in order to pursue egalitarianism on surface in distribution of land, in the process of the de-collectivization sacrificed economic efficiency. Thus, if the land was private, then those difference arouse from distribution will decease after enough time, because the free market will lead to equal efficiency through the choose of market. However, such political background lacked from beginning on, so that the shortcoming of a non-privatization de-collectivization can’t be corrected or even be enlarged because of problem of political system.
One of the main reason is political structure over the collective ownership. First at grass-root level, it was usually the village head, who takes the power to decide distribution since decentralization. So that the cadre family or their relations will surely benefit from the distribution. Having a cadre in the family seems to be a certain prerogative in using their political status to accumulate wealth. At one hand, Village cadres may allocate more fertile parts of the village land to themselves and determined more favorable grain sales quotas for themselves. And also, cadres have more opportunity to build personal relationship with higher level and other important departments, rural credit banks or transportation companies for example, so that they have more chance to obtain material benefit than normal peasants. As we see, most of collective enterprises and private economies in rural areas have tight relationship with local governments, at the basic level, with villager cadres, most rural enterprisers are villager leader themselves. Furthermore, cadres and their relations generally tend to break the policy of birth control, because they are capable to support more family members, and their kin will strengthen their economic and political power in return.
At another hand, though according to the election regulation of rural cadre in china, these village cadre should be elected directly by villagers, who have common interest in the community, this rule has been almost never put into practice. Under one Party system and public ownership system, all important resources are gathered in the Party’s hand, as a result, instead of election, the opinion from higher level plays a significant role, in order to carry ort the policy of Party efficiently. In fact, two factors determine the candidates in appointment of village head, one is the relationship with official of higher level, and the other is kinship. Consequently, cadre family takes all advantages to maintain their power and status through such appointment. So, cadres in rural China don’t represent the benefit of their village members, but the power of the Party as well as the family, there is no possibility for peasants to claim equality or save their from suffering as a peasant.
In a word, after a short flourish in rural China, which came along with the de-collectivization and the implement of Household Responsibility System, most peasants have to face the irrational occupation and distribution system of farmland and the political system, which is impossible to change. Besides there was strict limitation prevent peasants from abandoning their responsible land and rushing into cities, so that the peasants found it is hard to change their situation or turn it more better and free. This may explain why in rural china exists always the tendency of over population but the income of household began to decrease only after less than 10 years from the de-collectivization. As a result, land reform in China has emerged as a difficult issue in rural areas of exchange between social equality and economic efficiency. It seems obvious that since the mid-1980s the wide rural society has been caught in this predicament: where social equality or equity worsened, and at same time economic efficiency held back.. According to statistics, average net income in countryside has been slowed down for years. In 2000, the household average income only reached 272 dollars, but the Gini coefficient in China base in urban and rural areas rose from 0.21 in 1978 to more than 0. 46.
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陕西省对不按时送适龄儿童接受义务教育和招用童工的处罚办法

陕西省人民政府


陕西省对不按时送适龄儿童接受义务教育和招用童工的处罚办法
陕西省人民政府



第一条 根据《中华人民共和国义务教育法》第十五条和《陕西省义务教育实施办法》第二十七条中的有关规定,特制定本办法。
第二条 适龄儿童、少年未经乡(镇)人民政府或街道办事处批准,不按时入学接受义务教育或中余辍学者,由乡(镇)人民政府或街道办事处对其父母或其他监护人进行批评教育,经教育无效,除责令其送子女或被监护人入学外,并按以下标准处以罚款:农村每人(次)每学年度罚
款三十元至六十元;城市每人(次)每学年度罚款五十元至一百元。
第三条 对招用应该接受义务教育的儿童、少年就业的组织或个人,由当地乡(镇)人民政府或街道办事处给予批评教育,责令退回并不再招用。同时,每招一人处以五百元至五千元的罚款。情节严重的,提请工商行政管理部门令其停业或吊销营业执照。
对迫使应该接受义务教育的儿童、少年做工、从商、当学徙的父母或其他监护人,由乡(镇)人民政府或街道办事处给予批评教育,令其改正错误。坚持不改的,按照第二条罚款标准,加重一倍处罚。
第四条 罚款执行机关,农村为乡(镇)人民政府,城市为街道办事处,罚款决定作出后,由乡(镇)人民政府或街道办事处向被罚款单位或个人发出罚款通知书。被罚款单位或个人在收到罚款通知书十五日内,应将所罚款如数交给罚款执行单位。对罚款不服者,可在收到罚款通知书
后十五日内,向当地人民法院起诉,逾期既不起诉又不接受罚款的,由罚款执行单位申请人民法院强制执行。
第五条 小学和各类初级中等学校,每学年开学后,应对本学区贯彻义务教育法的情况进行检查,对应处罚款的组织和个人,经调查核定后,及时上报罚款执行机关。
学校随意拒收学区内适龄儿童、少年入学,或责令学生停学、退学的,由上级教育行政主管部门负责纠正;情节严重的,对责任者给予行政处分。
第六条 在陕南、陕北的穷困乡村,本办法第二条所规定的罚款数额可以实行减免。减免的前提是:能及时纠正违法行为,保证送子女或者被监护人入学的;家庭经济特别困难,父母或其他监护人残疾的。罚款减免由被罚款人申请,村民委员会和有关学校签注意见,报乡(镇)人民政
府或街道办事处批准。
第七条 罚款一律上缴本级财政,用于义务教育事业。
第八条 本办法对招用童工的处罚从颁布之日起执行。对不按时送适龄儿童、少年接受义务教育的处罚,小学从宣布实施初等义务教育之日起执行;初级中等教育由宣布实施初中阶段义务教育之日起执行。




1989年1月17日

江苏省实施《中华人民共和国职业教育法》办法

江苏省人大常委会


江苏省实施《中华人民共和国职业教育法》办法
江苏省人民代表大会常务委员会



《江苏省实施〈中华人民共和国职业教育法〉办法》已由江苏省第九届人民代表大会常务委员会第十一次会议于1999年8月20日通过,现予公布,自1999年10月1日起施行。


第一条 为了实施科教兴省战略,发展职业教育,提高劳动者素质,根据《中华人民共和国职业教育法》等法律、法规,结合本省实际,制定本办法。
第二条 本办法适用于本省行政区域内各级各类职业学校教育和各种形式的职业培训。法律、法规另有规定的除外。
本办法所称的职业学校教育是指学历职业教育,包括初、中、高等职业学校教育;职业培训是指非学历职业教育,包括从业前培训、转业培训、学徒培训、在岗培训、转岗培训以及其他职业培训。
第三条 职业教育应当适应本省经济发展和社会进步的需要,改革办学体制和运行机制,重点发展中、高等职业学校教育,广泛开展各种形式的职业培训,促进初、中、高等职业教育相衔接,建立、完善与其他教育相互沟通、协调发展的职业教育体系和制度。
第四条 县级以上地方各级人民政府应当将发展职业教育纳入本地区国民经济和社会发展规划,加强对职业教育工作的领导、统筹协调和督导评估,合理调整结构和布局,优化教育资源配置,举办一批发挥骨干和示范作用的职业学校和职业培训机构,充分发挥职业教育在促进经济、社
会发展和劳动就业中的作用。
第五条 教育行政部门负责本行政区域内职业教育工作的统筹规划、综合协调、宏观管理,对有关职业教育法律法规的执行情况进行督促检查。
教育、劳动行政部门和其他有关部门在各自的职责范围内,分别负责有关职业教育工作。
第六条 行业主管部门或者行业组织应当履行下列职责:
(一)组织、协调和指导本部门或者本行业职业教育工作,制定发展规划,并组织实施;
(二)按照国家和省规定,举办或者联合举办职业学校和职业培训机构,组织、支持本部门或者本行业的企业事业单位举办职业教育;
(三)按照行业性人才培养规格、职业资格标准制定岗位规范;
(四)改善所属职业学校和职业培训机构的办学条件,对其教育质量和办学效益进行检查监督;
(五)指导受教育者的就业与创业。
第七条 企业应当履行下列职责:
(一)负责对本单位职工和准备录用人员实施职业教育,依法保障其接受职业教育的权利;
(二)制定并组织实施本单位职业教育规划和年度计划;
(三)建立、健全本单位职业教育规章制度,实行培养、培训、考核、使用与待遇相结合;
(四)支持和扶持所属职业学校和职业培训机构进行与其任务相适应的基础设施建设,改善办学条件。
第八条 鼓励社会力量和公民个人举办或者参与兴办职业教育,积极发展民办职业教育,促进社会各界共同参与、各种办学主体和办学形式共同发展。
有条件的公办职业学校,经批准可以改制为“公有民办”学校或者与社会力量共建职业教育机构。
民办职业教育举办者根据国家有关法律、法规自主办学,自我发展,并承担相应的责任。
第九条 举办职业学校和职业培训机构,应当具备法定条件,符合职业教育统筹规划。
职业学校和职业培训机构的设立、变更、终止,按照国家和省人民政府规定办理相关手续。
境外的组织和个人在本省境内办学和合作办学,按照国家有关规定执行。
第十条 高等职业学校教育由省统筹规划,通过合理配置现有教育资源和新建高等职业学校组织实施。
支持普通高等学校举办或者与企业合作举办高等职业学校。
第十一条 高等职业学校可以采取多种方式招收中等职业学校和普通高中毕业生以及具有同等学力的人员。
高等职业学校直接招收初中毕业生的,学制不得低于五年。
高等职业学校专科毕业生,经过一定的选拔程序可以进入高等职业学校或者普通高等学校的本科阶段继续学习。
第十二条 高等职业学校应当在培养模式、培养目标上形成自己的特色,培养生产、建设、管理、服务第一线需要的实用型、技能型人才。
第十三条 县级人民政府应当利用现有基础教育、职业教育和成人教育资源,发挥职教中心等骨干学校的优势,带动行业、企业事业单位和农村的职业教育发展。
第十四条 农村职业学校和职业培训机构应当培养当地需要的适用人才。有关部门应当为职业学校开展产学研结合提供帮助和支持。
农村普通中学应当开设职业教育课程或者增加职业教育教学内容。
第十五条 行业主管部门、行业组织、企业事业单位实施职业教育,可以根据自身的特点和条件,通过举办或者联合举办职业学校、职业培训机构,或者委托职业学校、职业培训机构办学。
联合办学或者委托办学的,应当签订合同,明确经费、师资、设施、专业设置、教学管理和毕业生录用等内容。
第十六条 地方各级人民政府和有关部门应当采取鼓励政策和措施,扶持和办好面向苦、脏、累、险等艰苦行业(专业或者工种)的职业教育。
第十七条 地方各级人民政府和有关部门应当扶持残疾人职业教育的发展。职业学校和职业培训机构应当按照国家和本省有关规定接纳残疾人入学;特殊教育学校应当积极开展对残疾人的职业教育和培训。
第十八条 逐步扩大职业学校和职业培训机构在办学形式、专业(工种)设置、教学计划制定、教材选编、教师聘用、教育教学活动组织实施、经费使用以及招生、基本建设等方面的自主权。
第十九条 职业教育经费通过多种渠道依法筹集,主要包括:财政拨款、办学单位自筹、企业事业单位合理承担、受教育者缴纳、银行信贷、接受捐赠等。
地方各级人民政府及其有关部门应当支持职业学校利用外资办学。
第二十条 地方各级人民政府和有关部门用于举办职业教育的财政性经费必须逐步增长。
职业学校举办者应当按照学生人数平均经费标准足额拨付职业教育经费。职业学校学生的人均教育经费,应当高于同级普通学校。
第二十一条 按照国务院和省人民政府有关规定征收的用于教育的地方附加费,可以专项或者安排一定比例用于各类职业教育。
各地应当在人民教育基金中安排一定比例用于发展职业教育。
第二十二条 企业应当承担对本单位的职工和准备录用人员进行职业教育的费用,具体办法按照省人民政府有关规定执行。
企业未对本单位职工和准备录用人员实施职业教育的,县级以上地方人民政府应当责令改正;拒不改正的,可以收取企业应当承担的职业教育经费,用于本地区的职业教育。
第二十三条 地方各级人民政府可以在农村科技开发、技术推广经费中安排一定比例用于发展农村和农业职业教育。
乡镇企业发展基金应当支持乡镇企业的职业教育和技术培训。
第二十四条 职业学校、职业培训机构的学费标准按照专业情况、生均培养成本和社会承受能力等核算;对家庭经济困难的学生和残疾学生酌情减免。收费办法由省人民政府规定。
第二十五条 各级金融机构应当按照信贷原则及国家有关规定,对职业学校进行基本建设、购置教学设备和发展校办产业予以信贷支持。
有条件的地方可以采用政府贴息贷款,扶持职业学校及其校办企业和实习基地的建设。
第二十六条 地方各级人民政府应当切实减轻职业学校和职业培训机构的负担。对不符合国家和省人民政府规定的收费,学校有权拒绝缴纳。
第二十七条 地方各级人民政府及其有关部门应当把职业学校的基本建设纳入城乡建设规划,统筹安排学校的基本建设用地,依据国家有关规定,给予学校享受有关税费的优惠政策。
第二十八条 职业学校和职业培训机构发布招生广告(含招生简章),必须按照国家有关规定履行审批手续。
第二十九条 职业学校和职业培训机构学生学业期满,经考核合格,按照国家规定发给学历证书或者培训证书。
职业学校和职业培训机构的学生,可以直接参加职业技能鉴定,经职业技能鉴定机构考核合格的,按照国家规定发给相应的职业资格证书。
第三十条 职业学校应当引导毕业生通过人才、劳动力市场就业。各级人事、劳动行政部门应当对毕业生就业和劳动力输出提供服务。
第三十一条 推行就业准入制度。从事一般职业(工种)的职工,必须取得相应的职业学校毕业证书或者职业培训合格证书;从事国家和地方政府以及行业有特殊规定职业(工种)的职工,在取得职业学校毕业证书或培训合格证书的同时,还必须取得相应的职业资格证书。
第三十二条 地方各级人民政府及其有关部门应当鼓励和支持职业学校毕业生自谋职业、自主创业以及从事农业生产经营、技术推广等活动。
企业事业单位应当优先录、聘用专业对口或者相近的各类职业学校毕业生。
第三十三条 职业学校教师的资格和待遇,根据《中华人民共和国教师法》、《教师资格条例》等有关规定执行。职业学校教师享受同级学校同等待遇。
第三十四条 鼓励和支持企业事业单位工程技术人员、特殊技能人员、高级技术工人、技师和高级技师担任职业学校专职或者兼职教师;担任专职教师的,享受教师待遇。
鼓励和支持非师范院校毕业生到职业学校任教。
第三十五条 职业学校、职业培训机构及其举办者应当鼓励和支持教师通过多种途径,提高学历层次、专业水平和实践能力;建立具有高级职称、硕士以上学位的专业(学科)带头人队伍。
第三十六条 职业学校、职业培训机构的专业教师和实习指导教师可以实行教师职称兼其他专业技术职称(技术等级)制度,聘任后享受相应的待遇。
第三十七条 职业学校、职业培训机构的举办者,应当按照标准配备实验仪器设备和设施,加强教学和生产实习基地建设。
地方各级人民政府和行业主管部门应当选择一批专业对口的企业作为职业学校实习基地。
第三十八条 企业事业单位应当积极接纳职业学校和职业培训机构师生实习;安排未成年学生实习的,应当在工种、劳动时间、劳动强度和保护措施等方面参照国家对未成年职工保护的有关规定执行。
第三十九条 县级以上地方各级人民政府和有关部门应当建立、健全职业教育服务体系,开展职业教育教研、科研等活动。
第四十条 违反有关规定,有下列行为之一的,依照《中华人民共和国教育法》等规定,由有关行政主管部门予以处罚:
(一)擅自举办职业学校或者其他职业教育机构的;
(二)擅自发放学位证书、学历证书、职业资格证书或者其他学业证书的;
(三)向受教育者擅自收取费用的;
(四)挪用、克扣职业教育经费的。
第四十一条 本办法自1999年10月1日起施行。



1999年8月23日

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