The widening gap between rich and poor continues to pose a challenge to stability in China, with the latest figures showing that the Gini coefficient reached 0.438 in 2010, which exceeds UN warning levels, the International Institute for Urban Development said in its report in Beijing.
The Gini coefficient, an index measuring inequality of income with a scale of zero to one (zero being totally equal and one being totally unequal), suggests that a country with a figure higher than 0.4 has dangerous levels of wealth inequality, state-run Global Times newspaper reported.
According to reports in the Beijing News, the figure went from 0.275 in the 1980s to 0.438 at the end of 2010.
The report said the new index indicated that there have been risks of instability associated with the great achievements of the reform and opening-up policy, such as the increasing gap between the rich and poor and intensifying contradictions between government officials and the public.
The excerpts of the report which was carried in Beijing by the official media in Beijing on Monday came head of the 18th
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