CHINA> National
Gov't subsidies help double rural insurance
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-01-26 16:14

BEIJING -- Government subsidies for premiums helped double China's agricultural insurance sector last year, the industry regulator said.

A vendor watches as customers select apples from her streetside stall in rural Lankao outside of Zhengzhouin, central China's Henan province, Sunday January 18, 2009. Government subsidies for premiums helped more than double China's agricultural insurance sector last year, the industry regulator said. [Agencies]

Premiums more than doubled to 11 billion yuan (about US$1.63 billion), and nearly 11 million rural households received 6.9 billion yuan in claims payments last year, up 110 percent year-on-year, statistics from the China Insurance Regulatory Commission (CIRC) showed.

Related readings:
 China expands rural home appliance subsidies
 Govt offers 10b yuan in subsidies for power sector
 Hu urges stable rural economic development
 Graduates offered business subsidies

Calling the increases a "breakthrough," CIRC Statistical Department chief Wu Xiaojun attributed the rise to a pilot program that expanded from six to 16 provinces between 2004 and 2008.

The government began to offer subsidies for farm insurance premiums in major grain- and livestock-producing areas in 2004. At the time, aggregate agricultural policy premiums stood at less than 400 million yuan, a mere fraction of last year's figure.

Subsidies vary, but for example, sow-breeders in Heilongjiang Province pay only about 20 percent of the premium, with central and local finance covering the rest.

Jiangsu Province, in eastern China, earlier this month put 50 million yuan into a reserve fund against natural disasters, equivalent to 10  percent of the province's total agricultural insurance premiums in 2008. Those premiums covered 2.3 million ha of rice, corn and cotton crops.

CIRC Inner Mongolia Bureau chief Zhi Pengfei said that expanding farm insurance had strengthened the local farming and breeding industries.

He said that Inner Mongolia planned to add rape, sunflower seeds and dairy cows to the program this year. So far, farm insurance in the region has only covered sows, corn, wheat and soybeans.