First piloted as 'linking people and land', and later expanded to include 'money'. 'Linking people and land' has been piloted extensively as a strategy to encourage urbanisation. When a rural resident moves to a city, the amount of construction land there is typically allowed to increase by a given amount. In the 2016 government work report, this expanded to include central financial subsidies: the central state will pay localities for each newly urbanised resident given access to full social services ('deep urbanisation'). While the mechanisms are still unclear, 'linking people, land and money' is now key to incentivising local governments to achieve central urbanisation goals.