Job
prospects grow brighter
(11/12/2002)
Market demand now plays a dominant role in allocating human resources
in China, and a social security framework with Chinese characteristics
has taken initial shape, a leading labour official said Monday in
Beijing.
Speaking at a press conference held on the sidelines of the ongoing
16th Party congress, Zhang Zuoji, minister of labour and social
security, said that the country has witnessed expanded employment,
great progress in re-employment and fundamental changes in its employment
structure over the past 13 years.
According to Zhang, the number of people employed across the country
rose to 730 million in 2001 from 650 million in 1990.
The service industry has become a major channel for surplus labourers.
Its share of the employment pie increased from 18.5 per cent in
1990 to 27.7 per cent in 2001, the minister said.
The rapid development of individual and private businesses has
also contributed greatly to the country's employment efforts. Statistics
indicate that 30 million urban residents, representing 40 per cent
of the total increase in urban employment, found jobs in the private
sector from 1990 to 2001, said the minister.
Substantial progress has been made in re-employment with 17 million
out of the total 26 million laid-off workers from State-owned enterprises
(SOEs) having found new jobs from the beginning of 1998 to June
of 2002, said Zhang.
The past 13 years have been the best period for the establishment
of a social security system with Chinese characteristics, he said.
Three social security schemes have been in full operation across
the country, catering to the needs of laid-off workers from SOEs,
the jobless and the urban poor respectively, according to Zhang.
By September 2002, the number of people shielded by unemployment
insurance totalled 101 million, an increase of 36 million over 1989's
figure, Zhang said.
Headway has also been made in reforming the pension insurance system,
and the reform of the comprehensive medical insurance system has
been initiated, he said.
Meanwhile, employees' wages have increased and the legal rights
and interests of the workers have been well protected, the minister
said, adding that the number of public holidays was increased from
59 to 114 days per year since the mid 1990s, an improvement in the
quality of people's lives.
In response to questions on the unemployment rate and on providing
social security to rural people, Zhang said that the current registration
system of urban unemployment does not take into account laid-off
workers from SOEs or farmers seeking jobs in cities.
China's unemployment rate is expected to be kept under 4 per cent
this year, 0.5 percentage points lower than the expected figure,
the minister said.
At present, around 60 million farmers are participating in some
kind of social security scheme and 1.08 million have started to
collect pension benefits, Zhang said.
Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin's report delivered on Friday
sent a clear signal to social security workers that they should
forge ahead with explorations of setting up a pension system, a
medical-care system and a minimum living standard payment system
in rural areas where conditions are ripe, Zhang said.
A senior trade union official also said at the press conference
that trade unions across China have played an important role in
promoting democratic management inside enterprises and helping safeguard
the legitimate rights and interests of employees.
Zhang Junjiu, vice-chairman of the All-China Federation of Trade
Unions (ACFTU), declared that the country had established nearly
2 million trade unions branches at the grass-roots level by the
end of June 2002, with a record 130 million members.
The trade unions have also helped improve the country's social
security system and promote re-employment, he said.
According to Zhang, the trade unions helped nearly 3 million laid-off
workers find new jobs in the past five years, and launched training
courses to help improve the job skills of 3.19 million laid-off
workers.
The trade unions have also been keen to protect the legitimate
rights and interests of working people, Zhang added.
Taking a question about trade unions in joint ventures and in foreign-funded
enterprises in some parts of the country - the coastal regions of
Southeast China in particular - Zhang said he is not satisfied with
the situation there.
"Some foreign-funded, private or newly established enterprises
simply do not have trade unions," he said.
The ACFTU will follow international practices and help those enterprises
set up trade unions to better protect the rights and interests of
the employees and more smoothly tackle labour disputes, the vice-chairman
said.
(China Daily)
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