Type
General Knowledge
Author
Shenggen Fan and Connie Chan-Kang
Organization
INTERNATIONAL FOOD POLICY RESEARCH INSTITUTE
Published in
2005
Submitted by
Contributor
Related theme(s)
Social Development
Region
Asia (AS)
Country
International

Road Development, Economic Growth, and Poverty Reduction in China

In 1978, China initiated its economic and agricultural policy reforms. The ensuing rapid
economic growth led to transportation shortages and congestion problems and increased
the demand for roads. Since 1985 the government has given high priority to road development,
particularly the construction of high-quality roads such as highways and freeways.
While the construction of high-quality roads has taken place at a remarkably rapid pace, the
construction of lower-quality and mostly rural roads has been slow.
This study evaluates the contribution of roads to economic growth and poverty reduction
in China. It disaggregates road infrastructure into different classes of roads to account for quality,
and then estimates the impact of road investments on overall economic growth, agricultural
growth, urban growth, urban poverty reduction, and rural poverty reduction.
The study finds that benefit–cost ratios for lower-quality roads (mostly rural) are about
four times larger than those for high-quality roads when the benefits are measured in terms of
national GDP. Even in terms of urban GDP, these ratios are much greater for low-quality roads
than for high-quality roads. In terms of poverty reduction, the study finds that, for every yuan
invested, lower-quality roads raise far more rural and urban poor people above the poverty line
than high-quality roads. Another significant finding of the study is the tradeoff between
growth and poverty reduction in different parts of China, implying the need to formulate different
regional priorities depending on whether economic growth or poverty reduction is more
important for a particular part of the country.
IFPRI has long emphasized the importance of infrastructure for promoting economic
growth and reducing poverty. Without this essential public good, efficient markets, adequate
health care, a diversified rural economy, and sustainable economic growth will remain elusive.
Effective development strategies require good infrastructure as their backbone.
The enormous benefit of rural roads that the study reveals for China holds true for other
countries as well. Investment in rural roads should be a top priority to reduce poverty, maximize
the positive effects of other pro-poor investments, and foster broadly distributed economic
growth.
Joachim von Braun
Director General, IFPRI