Tibet builds escape route from poverty
Tsamjo Drolma's family of four was registered as impoverished last year by the Lhunze county government in the Tibet autonomous region. The 49-year-old mother explained to China Daily some of the subsidies her family receives as a result. [Photo/China Daily] |
Financial aid
? About 300 yuan ($46) to plant grain on the family's 0.3 hectares of farmland.
? About 700 yuan to maintain their more than 34 hectares of grassland.
? 3,000 yuan each for Tsamjo Drolma and her husband for their work as forest rangers, a job reserved for impoverished families.
? 80 percent of the 3,800 yuan annual tuition fee paid for the couple's eldest son, who graduated from a college in Tibet this year.
? 8,000 yuan a year to cover their youngest son's college expenses, including the 6,000 yuan annual tuition fee. He was accepted at a college in Tianjin last year.
? 15,000 yuan to repair damage to their home caused by an earthquake last year.
? A 70 percent refund on any medical costs incurred at hospitals in Lhunze.
? 1 kilogram of salt for 0.5 yuan, compared with the market price of 2 yuan.
? A dairy cow valued at about 6,000 yuan.
? About 300 yuan each time a cadre visits, which is about three times a year.