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Young entrepreneurs lead rural revitalization

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2018-01-23 10:05:56China Daily Zhang Shiyu ECNS App Download
Workers sew a shopping bag in Lyu Xiaofang's factory in Shangshui county, Henan province. (Photo/Xinhua)

Workers sew a shopping bag in Lyu Xiaofang's factory in Shangshui county, Henan province. (Photo/Xinhua)

A decade ago, Lyu Xiaofang was one of millions of young Chinese women who left their rural homes to find work in distant cities.

Now, the 30-year-old migrant worker has returned to her village in Shangshui county, Henan province, and built a business making shopping bags, enabling other village women to earn money.

Wearing shiny earrings, lipstick and a stylish woolen coat, Lyu owns nine factories. In 2011, she set up the first, using sewing skills she mastered while working in Jiangsu province. She employs more than 300 young women from nearby villages.

They sell to big name supermarkets, including Walmart and Whole Foods. Profit on a shopping bag is just pennies, but a fast worker can earn 150 yuan ($23) a day, more than 3,000 yuan a month.

That's low compared to urban pay rates, but they enjoy life with their children and elderly relatives, which is a major consideration. Pregnant with her second child, Lyu says her factory schedule is aligned with that of local schools.

For decades, young people have left the countryside, long mired in poverty. Now they are harvesting opportunities there, attracting aspiring entrepreneurs to start businesses and build better lives.

Opportunities at home

In Shangshui county, 20,000 young women work in a garment factory filling orders for Uniqlo and Zara. In neighboring Lankao county, billboards hail "Returned Business Stars" on a major road. Lankao was officially lifted out of poverty last year.

In eastern Zhejiang province, people who found success in the cities are invited back by local Communist Party branches and elected as village heads to lead rural revitalization.

All this has not come easily. Since the 1980s, rural China has seen an exodus of workers. Each year, a 40-day travel frenzy, triggered by the Spring Festival, sees hundreds of millions of people shuttle between cities and their rural hometowns.

Poor infrastructure, pollution and lagging incomes drive young people away from rural areas. Most of the younger migrant workers have little experience of farming.

At its 19th National Congress in October last year, the Communist Party of China said China was facing the principal contradiction between unbalanced and inadequate development and the ever-growing demand for better living standards.

Minister of Agriculture Han Changfu pointed out that the biggest imbalance was between urban and rural development, and most of the inadequate development was in rural areas.

When Hao Xiangdong left his family in Henan in 2009, his village only had one road, and it was as wide as a tricycle. He saw farmers working hard, but trapped in poverty. "Growing rice was the sole income of most families."

He moved south and discovered that the herb rosemary was popular with urban people. To his surprise, both the soil and climate in his hometown were suitable for its cultivation, so he moved home and started a rosemary business.

Locals initially doubted the venture, but as it grew, more wanted to join it. Helped by agricultural experts, they studied new uses for the herb. Now their air fresheners, masks and essential oils are sold in Shanghai and Guangdong province.

Hao attributes his success to an improved rural environment, greater access to water and electricity, and better roads. The local government also offers land and credit support to village startups.

Hao, 29, was elected village Party head and determined to develop tourism by growing 100 hectares of rosemary to make his hometown rich and beautiful.

  

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