Of the total amount, VND 1.5 trillion (USD 66 million) will come from State budget while the remainder will be mobilized from provincial budget and other legal financial resources.
The province is targeting to reduce the number of poor households by 2 percent per year by 2020. Meanwhile, the proportion of impoverished households in specially disadvantaged communes must be slashed by 3.5-5 percent per year.
Under the program, the locality is also striving to have all of its poor and near poor receive vocational training and get access to healthcare insurance. In addition, all of the deprived families must have accommodations and 95 percent of the destitute people have hygiene water.
According to Trinh Viet Hung, Vice Chairman of the provincial People’s Committee, the program is synchronized with a line-up of multidimensional measures which help the poor access to basic services.
Those include providing vocational training in companion with job creation to ensure 80 percent of the trainees have jobs and facilitating conditions for laborers to work in local industrial parks, craft villages or in foreign countries, he said.
The province pays due attention to implementing preferential credit schemes and building practical models to encourage agriculture, forestry and fishery. Besides, it will allocate financial resources to carry out at least five sustainable poverty reduction programs every year, develop essential infrastructure in difficulty-ridden communes and stabilize production in villages inhabited by ethnic minority groups.
According to recent evaluation from the provincial People’s Committee, the locality has 42,000 poor households, accounting for 13.4 percent of total households, and over 28,000 near poor families, making up of 9 percent of total households.
During 2011-2016, some VND 6 trillion (USD 264.4 million) was mobilized for poverty alleviation programs and projects, helping 36,000 families escape from poverty and drop poverty rate by 2.7 percent per year.
However, the program still has some limitations, including accommodation support failing to meet set plan, poor households shifting to near poor households and disparity between number of poor households in urban areas and mountainous districts.
Source: VNA