What does the property income of precision poverty alleviation mean?

Generally speaking, the property income of Chinese residents can be divided into movable property (such as bank deposits and securities). ) and real estate (such as houses, vehicles, collectibles, etc.). ) owned by the family, mainly including interest, dividends, bonuses, rent, patent income, property appreciation income, net income from transfer, etc. Property income is an important indicator to measure the degree of national wealth.

Accurate poverty alleviation is the symmetry of extensive poverty alleviation. It is a poverty control method to accurately identify, help and manage the poor by referring to the environment in different poverty-stricken areas and the situation of different poor farmers with scientific and effective procedures.

The per capita net income of families is an auxiliary standard for poverty alleviation acceptance evaluation, and the per capita net income of poor households should exceed the national poverty alleviation standard. When leaving the country, the following items are included in the per capita net income of the family:

First, family business income. It mainly includes the income from aquaculture, fruit forest management and other family-run income (family-run supermarkets, shops, canteens, restaurants, kindergartens, nursing homes, factories, construction teams, train transportation, bus transportation and so on). ), the part produced and sold is counted as income. The calculation of net income should deduct household operating expenses, depreciation of productive fixed assets in the process of production and operation, taxes and contracting fees.

Second, wage income. Refers to the income obtained by family members who are employed by units or individuals through labor. Simply understood as work or other wage income. Migrant workers should deduct rent, daily living expenses and other related expenses.

Third, property income. Refers to the income obtained by families in return for providing funds to other institutions or handing over tangible unproductive assets to their own disposal. Mainly including interest, dividends, rent, bonuses, land acquisition compensation, etc.

Fourth, transfer income. Long-term and stable transfer income is included in the per capita net income of families, and short-term and temporary income is not included. Items included in the family's per capita net income include: pension; Support payments; Five guarantees are included in the per capita net income of families, including: retirement benefits; Support payments; Five guarantees and subsistence allowances; Pension; Long-term pension; Stable subsidy income (such as compensation for returning farmland to forests and grasslands, ecological forest subsidies, comprehensive agricultural subsidies, etc.). ); Disability allowance; Income from assets over three years (such as land consolidation, tourist parks, photovoltaics, facility agriculture, hydropower, minerals, etc.). ); Others have stable long-term transfer income. Items that are not included in the per capita net income of families include: cash and kind paid by the government to support poor households to develop their industries, such as industrial projects, seeds, seedlings, breeding animals, fertilizers, pesticides and other subsidies and incentive funds; Subsidies for renovation of dilapidated buildings; Subsidies for ex situ poverty alleviation and relocation; Poverty alleviation microfinance; Insurance payment funds; Temporary consolation money; Temporary relief funds; Helping cadres to give help funds; Helping gifts and donations from all walks of life; Funds donated occasionally by relatives and friends; Medical reimbursement, serious illness relief subsidy funds; Education subsidies; "Rain and Dew Plan" subsidy; "Two young students" special vocational training project subsidies; Farmers' livestock inventory; Others. As the basic basis of "two worries and three guarantees", the income of poor households should be comprehensively evaluated.