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Employment
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Since the founding of New China, the number of people employed
in China has been growing rapidly; especially in the past 21 years,
thanks to the adoption of the policy of reform and opening to the
outside world. The employment scale has been constantly enlarged,
employment channels have been widened daily, the mobility of the
work force has been speeded up, and the employment structure has
been optimized. At the end of 1999, 705.86 million people were working
in China, or an increase of 525.04 million over 1949, and 304.34
million over 1978. The number of employed people in cities and towns
grew more rapidly. In 1949, only 15.33 million urban people were
employed, and in 1978, only 95.14 million. But in 1999, the number
of urban employed people rose to 210.14 million, of whom 39.4 million
were self-employed.
In the past 21 years, along with the readjustment of the economic
and industrial structures, corresponding changes have taken place
in the employment structure. Tertiary industry has grown rapidly.
Between 1979 and 1998, the number of the people engaged in tertiary
industry increased by 3.8 times, with an average annual growth rate
of 6.9 percent, exceeding that for primary industry by 18 percent
and that for secondary industry by 4.4 percent. The employees in
tertiary industry have become the main force for promoting employment
growth. Fundamental changes have taken place in the people's outlook
on employment. In 1978, China did not have stock, private, or foreign-,
Hong Kong-, Macao- or Taiwan-invested economies; and there were
only 150,000 people engaged in the private economy. At the end of
1999, a total of 21 million people were engaged in these economic
sectors.
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| Zhu Xuelian, a laid-off textile worker, has now joined the
Hualian Supermarket and is a deputy manager of this shop. |
China has an enormous population, so adequate employment is a serious
problem. In an effort to solve this problem, beginning in 1993 the
Chinese government has allowed the market to function as the basic
lever for the allocation of labor, a labor services market policy
has been implemented, greater avenues to employment have been opened,
and a new setup has been established, characterized by state macro-control,
autonomy for enterprises in recruiting workers, autonomy for individuals
in seeking employment, market regulation of supply and demand and
the nationwide provision of social services. Labor and skill markets
have been established all over the country. In recent years, due
to the readjustment of the industrial structure, workers laid off
by some state-owned enterprises have been reemployed. The Chinese
government has implemented a large-scale reemployment project, and
some enterprises have founded reemployment centers to train laid-off
workers for new jobs. In 1999, the reemployment project made important
achievements: Through various channels, 4.92 million laid-off staff
and workers were reemployed, with the unemployment rate reduced
to 3.1 percent.
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