Shannon Brandao on LinkedIn: China tries to censor data about nearly 1 billion people in poverty
🎯 Newsweek [excerpt]: Internet censors in #China worked around the clock this week to suppress online discussions about #poverty in the country after an…

Shannon's excerpt from the article: "🎯 Newsweek [excerpt]: Internet censors in #China worked around the clock this week to suppress online discussions about #poverty in the country after an economist revealed nearly 1 billion people were living off less than $300 a month.

A hashtag on #Weibo, China's X-like microblogging app, pointed to the ongoing #incomeinequality by stating that '964 million people' were surviving on monthly incomings of 2,000 Chinese yuan, or about $280.

On Tuesday, the hashtag about China's economic woes briefly reached the No. 1 spot on Weibo's #trending page before it was taken down. A day earlier, Li Xunlei, chief economist at Zhongtai Securities, had published an article that highlighted the data.

...In his article for the #business outlet Yicai, Li cited data from a 2021 research paper by the China Institute of Income Distribution at Beijing Normal University, which placed the number of people living on less than 2,000 yuan a month at 964 million, or nearly 70 percent of the population.

Li assessed the state of the Chinese #economy and discussed pressing challenges as well as the potential for growth.

His article, which was later taken down, said China was at an 'inflection point' because of its population structure, which was once declining and aging. Li nonetheless concluded that competent government leadership could enable further economic growth, possibly doubling China's GDP by 2035.

In June 2020, Wang Haiyuan and Meng Fanqiang, the authors behind the income study cited by Li this week, published an article in China's leading #financialnews magazine #Caixin, in which they quoted late Premier Li Keqiang's comments about the estimated 600 million Chinese people who were living on less than 1,000 yuan, or $140, a month.

'Although 40 years of reform and opening up have greatly improved the country's comprehensive strength and level of national income, as of today, the fact that we have a large population, few resources and very uneven development is still obvious, and a considerable number of residents are still close to the poverty line,' Wang and Meng wrote.

Their old article was also deleted from Caixin's website in the aftermath of efforts to suppress Li's more recent analysis.

At the end of 2020, China's President Xi declared a 'complete victory' over absolute poverty in the country, which Beijing defines as living off 2,300 yuan a year. He said the last remaining 99 million people were lifted out of the category, but the message arrived to little fanfare at the time."

#news