Consolidation promotes development of farming sector
Between 1949, when the People's Republic of China was founded, and 1952, the landlord system was abolished and farmers were given full ownership of their land: they could buy, sell, operate it freely or lease it to other people.
However, in 1953, China started its socialist transformation, which promoted collective land ownership by rural cooperatives and related groups. Farmers worked together in units and did not have the right to lease land to others or transfer ownership.
In 1978, farmers were allowed to sign contracts with villagers' committees for use of an agreed area of land operated by local cooperatives.
In the years that followed, more efficient production methods resulted in higher yields and led to the founding and promotion of family-based individual farms on contracted land nationwide.
That transformation prompted the nation's farmers to raise their work rates, which resulted in better yields and ensured food shortages and hunger quickly became history.
However, although farmers had the right to work the land they contracted they were not allowed to transfer or lease it, so it was generally not in circulation - that is, leased out - in rural areas.
To provide a greater sense of security among farmers, in 1997 and 2017, the central government pledged that land contracts would automatically be extended for 30 years when they expired.
- Whale injured in collision with fishing boat near Weizhou Island
- Lizard found on high-speed train brought by passenger, rail authorities say
- Zeiss top exec: Learn from China speed
- Ancient tomb cluster in Changsha offers a glimpse into millennia of history
- Stephen Chow deepfakes spark legal, ethical concerns in China
- Shanghai announces prizes worth 300m yuan to fuel consumption
































