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China to loosen rules on urban residency

By The Associated Press
Published: December 12, 2015, 9:41pm

BEIJING — China will loosen its stringent regulations on urban residency to allow more people to enjoy public services such as housing, education and health care beginning next year.

Chinese citizens have for decades been limited in public services they can access by their household registration, known as a hukou (“who-co”). The problem is especially acute for the millions of migrant workers who are often forced to either leave their children in the countryside or place them in unregistered and often sub-standard schools in the city.

While various cities have implemented incremental reforms, the move announced Saturday will relax the rules on a national basis and reduce opportunities for corruption and irregularities.

Details of the reforms were not immediately released, although a statement posted on the Cabinet’s official website said they would take effect from Jan. 1.

“The move is to improve basic public services in urban areas and provide conveniences for residential permit card holders,” the Cabinet said in a statement on its website.

Following three decades of financial reforms, the world’s most populous country became predominantly urban in 2011, and officials are encouraging the trend as part of a transition toward a more services-based economy. Of the country’s 1.3 billion people, 55.6 percent now live in cities.

The reform reflects President Xi Jinping’s campaign to allow more citizens to take part in what is termed the “Chinese Dream” of middle-class prosperity and household security. State broadcaster CCTV reported on the reform on Sunday’s noon-time news under the heading of “underscoring the importance of people as the foundation and advancing fairness and justice.”

Along with creating a generation of “left-behind” children, the hukou system is blamed for restricting the prospects of educated young people from the countryside who are sometimes forced to the margins in major cities such as Beijing.

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