|
April 29, 2002
Foreword I.
Overall Stability in Employment Situation II.
Formation of New Labor Relations III. The
Establishment of a Social Security System IV.
Development in the Early Period of the 21st Century Foreword The right to work and enjoy social
security is a fundamental right of citizens, having a direct
bearing on their vital interests. As the most populous and
largest developing country in the world with a relatively
low level of economic development, China is faced with an
onerous task of promoting its work in this regard. Proceeding from China’s actual conditions, and
in accordance with the Constitution of the People’s
Republic of China and the Labor Law of the People’s
Republic of China, the Chinese government has made
remarkable achievements in ensuring its citizens’
right to work and enjoy social security, and in improving
labor and social security management and services. Immediately after the founding of the People’s
Republic of China in 1949, the Chinese government took a
series of effective measures, successfully solving the
serious problem of unemployment left over by the old China
and ensuring the people’s basic livelihood. Under the
planned-economy system, China adopted highly concentrated
employment, wage and labor insurance systems, which played a
positive role in making comprehensive arrangements for
employment, guaranteeing the livelihood of employees, and
promoting economic construction and social stability at that
time. However, with the progress of history, the old labor
and social security system had become unadaptable to the
requirements of economic and social development. Since 1978, China has adhered to the policy of reform
and opening-up, with the focus on economic construction, and
has gradually stepped onto the road of establishing a
socialist market economy system. As a result, labor and
social security undertakings have developed rapidly. By
rationally readjusting the employment structure, increasing
overall employment and setting up a market-oriented
employment mechanism, the Chinese government has brought
about a basically stable situation in employment. By
maintaining harmonious and stable labor relations and
reforming the wage and income distribution system, the
government has improved the labor standards system step by
step, and helped to basically establish a new type of labor
relations. The reform and improvement of the social security
system has enabled the social insurance system to cover the
vast majority of employees and retirees in urban areas. The
system for ensuring a minimum standard of living for
residents has been set up in cities, and the building of a
social security system is being vigorously promoted in rural
areas. After years of trial and effort, a labor and social
security system corresponding to the socialist market
economy system is now basically in place. Based on
the principles of mutual respect, equality and mutual
benefit, the Chinese government actively participates in
international labor affairs. In the field of labor and
social security, China has conducted fruitful exchanges and
cooperation with many countries and international
organizations, such as the International Labor Organization,
United Nations Development Program, World Bank and Asian
Development Bank. It has played a positive role in the
international community in promoting employment, eliminating
poverty and protecting the legal rights and interests of
workers. Entering the 21st century, China has
embarked on a new development stage, the stage of starting
the full-scale construction of a comparatively well-off
society and accelerating modernization. The major goals of
China’s labor and social security efforts at the
beginning of the new century are promoting employment,
protecting employees’ rights and interests,
coordinating labor relations, raising people’s incomes
and improving social security. I. Overall Stability
in Employment Situation Employment presents a great
pressure on China due to its huge population, abundant labor
resources and economic restructuring. The Chinese government
regards increasing employment opportunities as a major
strategic task in economic and social development, and
controlling the rate of unemployment as a main target in
macro-economic regulation and control. It has rationally
readjusted the employment structure, established a
market-oriented employment mechanism, put great efforts into
increasing overall employment and maintained basic stability
in the general employment situation. By the end of 2001, the
country’s population had reached 1.27627 billion
(excluding the populations of the Hong Kong and Macao
special administrative regions and Taiwan Province), and
730.25 million people were employed, accounting for 77.03
percent of the total labor force. Employees in urban areas
accounted for 32.8 percent of the total, and those in rural
areas for 67.2 percent. The unemployment rate on record in
urban areas was 3.6 percent. Implementing the Policy
of Vigorously Increasing Employment Focusing on
economic construction, the Chinese government promotes
employment through economic growth, carries out an active
policy of employment, and adopts various effective measures
to increase the rate of employment. Rationally
readjusting the employment structure. In line with the
readjustment of the industrial structure, the government
guides the development of industries and enterprises capable
of offering more job opportunities. While increasing capital
construction investment, vigorously expanding the domestic
demand and maintaining the high-speed development of the
national economy, the government stresses the development of
labor-intensive enterprises with comparative advantages and
market potential, especially service enterprises and small
and medium-sized enterprises capable of offering employment
to a large number of people, through readjustment of its
industrial policies. It also increases employment and
expands employment channels by vigorously developing the
economy with diverse forms of ownership, such as collective,
private and individual ownerships, and by encouraging
various forms of employment. Establishing a
market-oriented employment mechanism. Carrying out the
employment policy of “laborers finding employment on
their own initiative, the market adjusting the demand for
employment and the government promoting employment,”
the Chinese government encourages securing employment
through fair competition, encourages employers to decide the
number and quality of their own employees, and adopts
measures to promote the shaping of a market-oriented
employment mechanism. In the meantime, the labor market
information network has started to display its worth,
promoting exchanges of information concerning labor supply
and demand, and helping the jobless find employment or
reemployment through the labor market. In order to set up a
labor market with a sound mechanism, standardized operation
and good service, and under effective supervision, the
Chinese government has conducted trials to set up a
scientific, standardized and modernized labor market in 100
cities. In recent years, the Chinese government has started
to trial-implement a pricing mechanism for the labor market,
in order to enable the market mechanism to play its basic
regulatory role in the allocation of labor resources, wage
formation and labor flow. Enhancing workers’
quality. In order to raise the cultural level and
professional skill of the work force, the Chinese government
has striven to promote all forms of education through
various channels, and laid equal stress on academic and
vocational qualification credentials. At present, the system
of nine-year compulsory education covers 85 percent of the
total population, and the illiteracy rate among the young
and middle-aged has dropped to 5 percent. There are
currently 1,225 regular institutions of higher learning,
with 7.19 million students; 686 adult institutions of higher
learning, with 4.56 million students; and 80,400 regular
middle schools, with 79.19 million students. China is aiming
to establish an all-round, multi-level vocational and
technical education and training system by developing higher
vocational and technical schools, secondary vocational and
technical schools, secondary polytechnic schools, technical
schools, employment training centers, community-run
vocational training institutions and enterprise-run
on-the-job training centers, thereby strengthening the
training of new workers, on-the-job employees and laid-off
workers. Pre-job training courses of one to three years are
offered to secondary-school graduates who have failed to
gain higher education. Technical schools and employment
training centers are being readjusted and restructured into
comprehensive training bases. A mechanism by which
“the market guides training, and training promotes
employment” is being formed. The vocational
qualification credentials system is being introduced, and a
vocational qualification system has been set up covering
workers at all levels, from basic workers to senior
technicians. At present, in urban areas over 80 percent of
newly employed people are graduates of senior high schools
or above, or have received job skill training. Nearly 35
million people have obtained vocational qualification
credentials. Developing the employment service
system. Since the 1980s, China has set up and improved the
employment service system, which includes employment
agencies, employment training, unemployment insurance and
employment service enterprises. The system offers guidance,
consultancy and agency services to job seekers and
employers, offers pre-job training and vocational training
courses to seekers of employment and reemployment, and
provides unemployment insurance. The system also offers job
openings to those of the weak group in the employment field.
In the meantime, the government encourages the formation of
community-run employment agencies as a part of the
multi-level employment service network. Making
overall plans for urban and rural employment. China has a
serious problem of insufficient employment opportunities in
rural areas, where there are abundant labor resources.
Attaching great importance to the employment of the rural
labor force, the Chinese government has explored new ways
for comprehensive employment planning in urban and rural
areas in line with the urbanization and western development
strategies. Two basic policies have been worked out. The
first is to encourage the rural labor force to find work
locally. Making full use of the advantages of local
resources in rural areas, the government will vigorously
readjust the structure of agriculture and that of the rural
economy; develop profitable and labor-intensive agriculture
alongside non-agricultural industries in rural areas; guide
township enterprises to develop in line with the
construction of small cities and towns; enlarge the
construction scales of infrastructure facilities such as
water conservancy, communications and transportation, and
electricity in the rural areas; and promote elementary
education and vocational training in the rural areas. The
second is to guide the rural labor force to find employment
in other areas. As success in rural reform has greatly
raised agricultural productivity, the surplus agricultural
labor force has started to flow from rural to urban areas,
and from western inland to eastern coastal areas. The
Chinese government guides the flow of rural labor to
different areas according to need, and, by strengthening
information network building and employment agency services,
offers pre-transfer training to rural workers and organizes
an orderly flow of the rural labor force, so as to ensure
the highest possible level of employment in this regard. The
government has also established an employment mechanism for
the two-way flow of rural workers, whereby to help the
latter to find jobs in other areas or return to their native
places to start businesses. At present, 1,000 rural labor
flow and employment monitoring stations have been set up in
100 counties and cities around the country to analyze the
flow of and demand for workers from the countryside and
regularly release information, so as to guide the rational
flow of migrant rural labor force. Enlarging
Employment Scale, Optimizing Employment Structure Through the common efforts of the government and all
sectors of society, total employment in China has grown
remarkably. Since 1978, the number of employees in urban and
rural areas has increased by 328.73 million, of which 144.26
million are urban employees. The employment
structure, too, has changed dramatically. In 2000, employees
in the primary, secondary and tertiary industries accounted
for 50 percent, 22.5 percent and 27.5 percent, respectively.
In recent years, the employment percentage of the primary
industry has dropped markedly, while the employment
percentages of the secondary and tertiary industries have
risen rapidly. Particularly, the growth rate of the
employment percentage of the tertiary industry has been
higher than that of the secondary industry. The employees of
state and collective enterprises and institutions accounted
for 37.3 percent of the total urban employees in 2001, down
from 99.8 percent in 1978. Meanwhile, the number of
employees of private, individually owned and
foreign-invested enterprises has increased drastically. In
the countryside, the household is still the dominant unit of
agricultural employment. However, with the implementation of
the urbanization strategy and the development of
non-agricultural industries, non-agricultural employment and
the transfer of rural labor have increased rapidly. By the
end of 2000, the number of employees of township enterprises
had reached 128.195 million, of which 38.328 million were
employed by township collective enterprises, 32.525 million
by township private enterprises and 57.342 million by
individually owned township enterprises. Since the 1990s,
the labor force transferred from rural to urban areas has
topped the 80-million mark. Promoting Reemployment of
the Laid-off and Unemployed With the speeding up of
the economic restructuring, the long-accumulated
contradictions in the operating mechanism of enterprises
have become increasingly apparent, and large numbers of
redundant employees in enterprises have been laid off. Most
of the laid-offs from state-owned enterprises are relatively
older, poorly educated and skilled in few jobs. Therefore,
it is rather difficult for them to find reemployment. To
settle the problem of the laid-off and unemployed personnel,
the Chinese government, while guaranteeing their basic
livelihood, has formulated a whole slue of policies,
complete with a variety of measures, to ease the way for
their reemployment. Adopting active employment
service measures. Reemployment service centers have been
established in all those state-owned enterprises that have
laid-off workers and staff members. After they have
registered with the centers, governmental public employment
service organs will provide them once with occupational
guidance, thrice with employment information and once with
free job training, all on a six-month basis. Beginning in
1998, the government started to implement the first phase of
the “ten million in three years” reemployment
training program, which was aimed at training ten million
laid-off jobless persons in the course of three years. By
mobilizing all the training forces in society, employing the
beneficiaries of training and other effective measures, the
government has convinced laid-off and unemployed persons to
participate in reemployment training. From 1998 to 2000,
more than 13 million laid-off and unemployed persons
nationwide had taken part in retraining, and the
reemployment rate after six months of training had reached
60 percent. The government began to carry out the second
phase of the reemployment training program in 2001.
Moreover, a total of 30 cities so far have carried out a
“starting a business” training program, offering
training to laid-off and unemployed persons who wish to
establish small businesses, helping them register with the
industrial and commercial administration authorities and
acquire small loans after the completion of training,
thereby to increase their reemployment opportunities through
the establishment of small businesses. Improving and
implementing preferential reemployment policies. By
simplifying the procedures of registration with industrial
and commercial administration authorities, arranging
business premises, reducing or waiving taxes and fees, and
granting loans, the government helps laid-off and unemployed
people set up economic entities or labor organizations to
support themselves, seek reemployment or otherwise to find
their own means of livelihood. Taking employment in
community services as the main orientation of the
reemployment efforts, the government has spared no pains to
develop those small enterprises and employment service
enterprises that can provide more employment opportunities. Unfolding the "Reemployment Assistance
Action." To appropriately resolve the practical
difficulties laid-off employees face after they leave
reemployment service centers, the government has organized a
“Reemployment Assistance Action” drive to extend
prompt and effective service to guarantee their basic
livelihood, reemployment and social insurance through
various assistance measures. From 1998 to 2001, over
25.5 million people were laid off from state enterprises, of
whom over 16.8 million have been reemployed. Guaranteeing Women’s Right to Employment Special concern has been given to the employment of
women in China. The Constitution of the People’s
Republic of China, Labor Law of the People’s Republic
of China, and Law of the People’s Republic of China on
the Protection of the Rights and Interests of Women all
contain special provisions on the protection of
women’s right to employment. The state protects the
right of women to work on equal terms with men, applies the
principle of equal pay for equal work to men and women
alike, and gives special protection to women during the
menstrual period, pregnancy, maternity and breastfeeding.
The Chinese government and all sectors of society
energetically conduct job skill training for women, develop
and expand the fields and trades suitable for women to work
in, and adopts more flexible forms of employment, so as to
provide employment opportunities for women to meet their
different requirements. Helping the Disabled and
Other Special Groups to Find Work The Chinese
government attaches great importance to the rights of the
disabled to social labor and employment. China adopts the
principles of combining centralization and decentralization
and encouraging seeking employment on one’s own
initiative to help the disabled find work. Welfare
enterprises are an important form of centralized employment
for the disabled. The government grants preferential
policies, such as reducing and waiving taxation, to
encourage the development of welfare enterprises, so as to
increase employment for the disabled. Meanwhile, the
government requires all enterprises and institutions to hire
a certain proportion of disabled persons, and those which
fail to do so must pay a certain amount of money to the
employment guarantee fund for the disabled. In the five
years of 1996-2000, more than 1.1 million disabled persons
were given skill training, and another 1.1 million found
jobs, on the strength of government allocations and the
employment guarantee fund for the disabled, and the
employment rate of the disabled jumped from 70 percent to
80.7 percent. In addition, the government has
established an employment service system for badly-off
jobless urban residents, and for older laid-off and
unemployed persons. It seeks to arrange jobs for destitute
persons by providing funds to support community welfare-type
employment organizations, developing community environmental
protection, hygiene, security and other services, and
providing free employment services. All these measures have
achieved the desired effects. II. Formation of New
Labor Relations In the course of establishing and
improving the socialist market economy system, labor
relations in China have become increasingly complicated and
diversified. China commits itself to the maintenance of
harmonious and stable labor relations. It has formed an
initial system of laws and regulations, with the Labor Law
of the People’s Republic of China as the main body, to
adjust labor relations, and has established the labor
contract and group contract systems, tripartite coordination
mechanism, labor standard system, labor dispute handling
system and labor protection supervisory system, basically
shaping up a new type of labor relations in consonance with
the socialist market economy. Instituting a Labor
Contract System China started to try out a labor
contract system in the mid-1980s, and energetically promoted
it in the 1990s. As a result, the labor contract system is
now universally implemented in urban enterprises of every
description. Chinese laws stipulate that employers and
employees shall establish labor relations in accordance with
the law, and conclude written labor contracts, with or
without fixed periods, or with a period to complete the
prescribed work; during the conclusion of the labor
contract, the two parties to the contract must abide by the
principles of equality, voluntariness and reaching unanimity
through consultation. The labor contract system clarifies
the rights and obligations of the employers and employees,
and safeguards the employees’ right to select jobs and
the employers’ right to select employees. Establishing a Group Contract System The
Chinese government encourages enterprises to continuously
strengthen the functions of the workers’ congresses
and trade unions, and improve the system of employees’
democratic participation. To form a self-coordination
mechanism of labor relations in enterprises, China has
trial-implemented and promoted a group contract system
through equal consultation. Chinese laws and regulations
stipulate that employees of an enterprise may conduct equal
consultation and sign group contracts with that enterprise
via trade union representatives or representatives directly
recommended by the employees themselves, with regard to
labor remuneration, working hours, rest and vacation, labor
safety, labor hygiene, insurance, welfare and other matters.
Equal consultation takes diversified forms, and group
contracts have wide-ranging contents. Signing group
contracts through consultation between the trade union and
the enterprise has now been adopted by most enterprises. In recent years, the group contract system has not
only been popularized in non-state enterprises, but also
been gradually carried out during the reform of state-owned
enterprises. By the end of 2001, the number of group
contracts signed by enterprises nationwide and submitted to
the labor and social security administration departments for
the record had reached 270,000. Setting Up a
Tripartite Coordination Mechanism China has made
active efforts to establish a government-trade
union-enterprise tripartite coordination mechanism in
conformity with its actual conditions. In this mechanism,
representatives from government labor and social security
departments at all levels, trade unions and enterprises
constitute a coordination organ to conduct communication and
consultation on major problems relating to labor relations,
and put forth suggestions on the drafting of labor and
social security regulations, major reform programs, policies
and measures concerning the interests readjustment of the
three parties. In August 2001, the Ministry of Labor
and Social Security, All-China Federation of Trade Unions
and China Enterprise Association jointly established the
State Tripartite Conference System of Labor Relations
Coordination, and convened the first national tripartite
conference of labor relations coordination, setting a
standard and stable operating mechanism for China’s
labor relations coordination. So far, a dozen provinces and
municipalities, including Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, Shanxi
and Jiangsu, and the two cities of Shenzhen and Dalian have
set up regional tripartite coordination mechanisms for labor
relations. Among them, Shanxi and Jiangsu provinces have
established such mechanisms at the provincial,
prefecture/city, and county/district levels. Bettering the Labor Standard System The
Chinese government attaches great importance to rationally
determining, legally promulgating and timely adjusting labor
standards to guarantee the lawful rights and interests of
workers and promote economic and social development. At
present, a labor standard system is basically in place,
centering on the Labor Law of the People’s Republic of
China and covering areas such as working hours, rest and
vacation, wage, prohibition of the use of child labor,
special labor protection for women employees and under-age
workers, work quotas and job safety and hygiene. The system
has been adjusted and improved along with the
country’s economic and social development. To
ensure that all workers enjoy the right to work, rest and
vacation, China adopts an eight-hour-day, 40-hour-week
system. When the employing unit needs to extend working
hours, they must consult with the trade union or the
workers, and generally the extension should not surpass one
hour a day, in special cases not more than three hours a day
or not more than 36 hours a month. All workers are entitled
to enjoy legal holidays and at least one day off a week. The state prohibits hiring people under the age of
16, and punishes the illegal employment of child labor. The
state prohibits all employers from hiring women and minors
(ages 16 to less than 18) for tasks explicitly prohibited by
state regulations. China has formulated national, trade and
local standards on job safety and hygiene. In order to
improve the management system of job safety and hygiene, in
1999 the Chinese government promulgated related standards,
at the same time starting attestation work. So far, China
has worked out more than 200 national and trade standards on
work and personnel quotas. It has also promulgated other
labor standards, such as job classification standards and
job skill standards. To ensure that labor standards
are scientific and rational and that they are implemented
smoothly, the government solicits suggestions from trade
unions, enterprises, specialists and scholars while
formulating, promulgating or adjusting labor standards. The
Chinese government has always maintained that labor
standards must be in sync with the country’s level of
economic and social development, that they should guarantee
basic human rights and promote economic development and
social progress, and on this basis should be gradually
improved. China values the experience of other countries in
formulating and implementing labor standards and, in time,
will accede to relevant international labor conventions in
line with the actual conditions of its economic and social
development. Improving the System for Handling Labor
Disputes The Chinese government holds that all labor
disputes should be handled according to law and in a timely
fashion, and that the lawful rights and interests of both
parties involved should be protected. It encourages both
parties in a dispute to solve their problems through
negotiation and consultation. Chinese laws and regulations
clearly define the procedures and organs responsible for the
settlement of labor disputes. According to the regulations,
whenever a labor dispute arises between a worker and an
enterprise, either party may apply to the labor dispute
mediation committee at the enterprise for mediation. If the
mediation fails or if neither party wants mediation, then
they may apply to the local labor dispute arbitration
committee for arbitration. If either party is not satisfied
with the decision of the arbitration committee, he or she
may file a lawsuit with a people’s court. By
the end of 2001 China had established 3,192 labor dispute
arbitration committees at the county-level or above,
consisting of nearly 20,000 full-time and part-time
arbitrators. From August 1, 1993, when the Regulations of
the People’s Republic of China Concerning the Handling
of Labor Disputes in Enterprises was promulgated, to the end
of 2001, labor dispute arbitration committees across the
country officially handled 688,000 labor disputes, which
involved 2,368,000 workers. More than 90 percent of these
disputes were settled. Besides, labor dispute arbitration
committees at various levels handled 503,000 labor disputes
that did not officially file for the record with them. Setting Up a Labor Security Supervision System In 1993, China embarked on the establishment of a
supervision system for labor security. The Labor Law of the
People’s Republic of China and Law of the
People’s Republic of China on Administrative
Punishment stipulates the responsibilities and work
procedures of labor security supervision organs. Labor and
social security administration departments supervise all
employers to make sure they observe labor and social
security laws and regulations. They have the right to halt
any violation of these laws and regulations and order the
violator to correct it; they may also issue disciplinary
warnings or impose fines on the violator. Any organization
or individual has the right to report or file a complaint
about any act that violates labor and social security laws
or regulations. When a person concerned thinks that a labor
and social security administration department has violated
his or her legitimate rights in the course of supervision
and execution of the laws, he or she may initiate an
administrative review or bring an administrative suit. According to the principle of promoting law-based
administration and enforcing laws strictly, labor and social
security administration departments at all levels have
constantly strengthened their law enforcement and
established or improved labor security supervision
organizations. By the end of 2001, China had set up 3,174
labor security supervision organs, with 40,000 labor
security supervisors. Reforming the Wage and Income
Distribution System The Chinese government adheres to
a diversified distribution system with distribution
according to work as the main form. The principle is to give
priority to efficiency with due consideration to fairness.
Reforms are being made to the wage system so that market
mechanism can play its regulatory role in the distribution
of income and that workers’ incomes can increase as
the economy develops and enterprises’ economic returns
increase. The Labor Law of the People’s Republic of
China, Regulations on Minimum Wages in Enterprises and
Provisional Regulations on Wage Payments contain clear-cut
provisions on standardizing the distribution of wages. The
Chinese government formulates minimum wage standards
according to law and makes timely adjustments to them,
standardizes wage payment methods, and regularly issues
information regarding wage guidelines, guidance wage levels
for the labor market, and labor costs. It encourages
enterprises to trial-implement the system of collective wage
negotiation and guides them to adopt diverse wage systems
and distribution forms. While safeguarding
enterprises’ right to independent decision-making in
the matter of wage distribution, the government also
guarantees workers’ right to receive the remuneration
for their work according to law. At present, a minimum wage
system has been basically established across the country,
and more than 10,000 enterprises have started to experiment
with pilot wage schemes through collective negotiations.
Twenty-six provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities
directly under the Central Government regularly release wage
guidelines, and 88 cities publicize guidance wage levels for
the labor market. Since China adopted the reform and
opening-up policy in late 1978, the national economy has
developed rapidly, and the wages of urban employees have
kept increasing. By the end of 2001, their annual per-capita
money wages had reached 10,870 yuan, 16.3 times the figure
for 1978. After allowing for inflation, the average annual
increase rate was 5.5 percent in real terms. III. The
Establishment of a Social Security System In order to
promote economic development and social stability, and to
gradually raise the living standards and social security
benefits of the general public, the Chinese government has
made every effort to establish a sound social security
system that corresponds with the socialist market economy
system. After years of exploration and practice, a social
security system has been basically set up, consisting mainly
of social insurance, social relief, social welfare, social
mutual help and special care for disabled ex-servicemen and
family members of revolutionary martyrs, and featuring the
raising of funds through various channels and the gradual
socialization of management and services. Reforming
the Social Security System Since the early 1980s, the
Chinese government has carried out a sequence of reforms in
its social security system with the goal of establishing a
standardized social security system independent of
enterprises and institutions, funded from various channels,
and with socialized management and services — a system
characterized mainly by basic security, wide coverage,
multiple levels and steady unification. Under this mandatory
state basic security, people’s basic living needs will
be met corresponding with China’s economic development
level, and the social security network will cover all
citizens step by step. Besides basic security, the state
will actively promote other types of social security so as
to form a multi-level social security system. Through reform
and development, a nationally unified social security system
will be put into practice step by step. Through more than a
decade’s efforts, basic social insurance policies have
been formulated, and successively promulgated and
implemented, covering the vast majority of urban staff and
retirees, and in some regions even rural people working in
cities are included. A social security system that
guarantees urbanites a minimum standard of living has been
established across China. In 2001, the Chinese government
began a pilot program in Liaoning Province, aimed at
improving the existing social security system in cities. Since the mid-1990s, the Chinese government has
undertaken reforms to the social security management system
in order to bring all social security systems under unified
planning, and better manage and supervise the use of social
security funds. Social insurance, which was previously
governed by a number of administrative departments, is now
under the centralized management of the labor and social
security administration departments. Labor and social
security administration departments at all levels have
established offices to handle the daily routine of social
insurance. The handling of social insurance affairs that
used to be the responsibility of enterprises are gradually
being transferred to social organizations, namely
beneficiaries now get their social insurance benefits from
organizations in their own communities and are subjected to
the latter’s administration. The Chinese government
has strengthened administrative and social supervision over
social insurance funds. These funds have been orbited into
special accounts and a system has been set up, whereby
revenue and expenditure are managed separately and the funds
are used for specified purposes only. Labor and social
security administration departments at all levels have
established supervisory organs to examine and supervise the
collection, management and payment of social insurance
funds. They also investigate and punish those who violate
the pertinent laws and regulations. In addition, the Chinese
government has adopted a large body of measures to increase
the sources of social security funds, such as strengthening
the collection of social security funds and raising the
ratio of such funds in the overall financial expenditure. In
2001, the central finance allocated 98.2 billion yuan to be
used for social security payments, 5.18 times the figure for
1998. The Chinese government has established a National
Social Security Fund Executive Council specially responsible
for the operation and administration of the funds acquired
from reducing state shareholding, the funds put in by the
central finance and social security funds collected from
other channels. The National Social Security Fund comes from
the central finance appropriations as well as from other
channels. Since 1998, the Chinese government has
adopted a “two guarantees” policy. The first is
a guarantee of the basic livelihood of the laid-off
personnel from state-owned enterprises. Reemployment service
centers for those laid-offs have been established in all
state-owned enterprises. They give laid-off personnel
allowances for basic living expenses and pay social
insurance premiums for them, with the required funds coming
from the government budget, enterprises and other sources
(mainly unemployment insurance funds). They also provide job
guidance and organize reemployment training programs to help
laid-off personnel find new jobs. The second guarantee is to
ensure basic livelihood for all retirees and that they
receive basic pensions in full and on time. To ensure the
implementation of the “two guarantees,” the
Chinese government has put forth three corresponding
policies: Laid-offs from state-owned enterprises can receive
a basic living allowance from the reemployment service
centers for a maximum of three years; if they still
haven’t found a job by then, they can receive
unemployment insurance payments for a maximum of two years;
at the end of the two-year period, if they still
haven’t been reemployed, they can apply for the
minimum living allowance paid to urban residents. By 2001,
the vast majority of people laid off by state-owned
enterprises were receiving a basic living allowance, and
retired personnel were receiving their pensions in full and
on time. Thus the “two guarantees” policy has
played a major role in safeguarding the legitimate rights
and interests of laid-off and retired personnel, and in
maintaining social stability. The Old-Age Insurance
System Reform of the old-age insurance system was
initiated throughout China in 1984. In 1997, the Chinese
government adopted a Decision on Establishing a Uniform
Basic Old-Age Insurance System for Enterprise Employees, in
light of which efforts were started along this line in urban
areas nationwide. The basic Chinese old-age insurance
system combines mutual assistance programs with personal
accounts. Employees of all urban enterprises may participate
in the basic old-age insurance program, and all enterprises
and employees in towns and cities have the obligation to pay
the basic old-age insurance premiums. At present, about 20
percent of the enterprise wage bill and 8 percent of
personal wage should go to such insurance. Part of the basic
insurance premiums from enterprises is used to set up mutual
assistance funds, and the rest goes to personal accounts.
The basic old-age insurance premiums paid by the individuals
go entirely to their personal accounts. The basic old-age
pension is in two parts: the base pension and the pension in
personal accounts. The base pension is covered by the mutual
assistance funds, the monthly sum amounting to 20 percent of
the average social wage of the employees and the monthly
pension in personal accounts come to 1/120 of the
accumulated amount in personal accounts. Pensions in
personal accounts can be inherited. Those who started
working before, and retired after, the implementation of
this new system are entitled to an additional pension for
the transitional period. Employees participating in
the old-age insurance program increased from 86.71 million
in late 1997 to 108.02 million by the end of 2001, after
several years of implementation of the program. The number
of those enjoying basic old-age pension also increased from
25.33 million to 33.81 million, with the average monthly
basic pension per person growing from 430 yuan to 556 yuan.
To ensure the timely and full payment of the pension, the
Chinese government in recent years has tried to raise the
basic old-age insurance fund under the mutual assistance
program gradually to the provincial level, coupled with a
steady increase of the financial input in that direction.
From 1998 to 2001, the subsidy outlay for this from the
central finance alone attained the grand total of 86.1
billion yuan. Now basic old-age pensions are mostly
delivered through social service institutions, such as banks
and post offices. In 2001, 98 percent of these pensions were
delivered in this way. The existing old-age security system
for employees and retirees from government institutions
remain unchanged. In 1991, China began to try out the
old-age insurance system in some of the rural areas. The
basic principle for the rural old-age insurance system is
that the premiums are to be paid mainly by the beneficiaries
themselves, supplemented by collectively pooled subsidy and
supported by government policies, the accumulation of funds
taking the form of personal accounts. The Medical
Insurance System In 1988, the Chinese government
began to reform the free medicare system in government
institutions and the labor protection medicare system in
state-owned enterprises. In 1998, the government issued the
Decision on Establishing the Basic Medical Insurance System
for Urban Employees, enforcing a basic medical insurance
system for urban employees throughout the country. China’s basic medical insurance system also
combines social mutual assistance programs with personal
accounts. In principle, the basic medical insurance funds
come in the form of mutual assistance programs at
prefectural and city levels. The basic medical insurance
covers all urban employers and employees, and all
enterprises, state administrative departments, institutions
and other organizations and their staff members and workers
have the obligation to pay the basic medical insurance
premiums. At present, about 6 percent of the wage bill of
employing units and 2 percent of personal wages should be
paid as part of the medical insurance premiums. Part of the
insurance premiums from employing units goes to the funds
under the mutual assistance program, and the rest to the
employees’ personal accounts. The personal insurance
premiums go entirely to personal accounts. The mutual
assistance funds and personal accounts are used to pay for
different types of medical costs: The former mainly for
hospitalization and outpatient services in the case of
certain chronic diseases, with a set starting standard and a
maximum norm, and the latter mainly for general outpatient
services. To ensure that employees covered by the
insurance program enjoy basic medical service and the
service charges do not increase too rapidly, the Chinese
government has strengthened its administration of medical
services by specifying a list of medicines, medicare service
items and standards of medicare facilities to be covered by
basic medical insurance and evaluating the qualifications of
the medical institutions and pharmacies that provide basic
medical insurance service, and allowing those who
participate in the program the right to make their own
choices. To support the reform of the basic medical
insurance system, the government has also initiated a reform
of the medical institutions and the medicine production and
circulation system. A mechanism of competition between
medical institutions and a market operating mechanism for
medicine production and circulation have also been set up
for “better medical service at lower cost.” Apart from the basic medical insurance, a system of
mutual help in the case of large-amount medical costs has
been set up throughout the country to cover medical costs in
excess of the maximum coverage under the mutual assistance
program. The state has also set up a medical subsidy program
for civil servants. Enterprises are encouraged to set up
enterprise supplementary medical insurance for their
employees, where conditions permit. The state will also,
step by step, institute a social medicare assistance system
to provide basic medical security for the impoverished
population. The reform of the basic medical insurance
system is being carried out steadily in China, with a
continued increase in the coverage of basic medical
insurance. By the end of 2001, 97 percent of prefectures and
cities had started such reform programs, and 76.29 million
employees had participated in basic medical insurance
programs. In addition, free medical service and other forms
of medicare security systems cover over 100 million
urbanites. The Chinese government is now working to
incorporate these people gradually in the basic medical
insurance system. The Unemployment Insurance System Shortly after the founding of the People’s
Republic of China in 1949, an unemployment relief system was
introduced for a short period of time. Later, with the
institution of the employment system featuring unified job
assignment under the planned economy system, the relief
system had gradually gone out of the picture. Following the
adoption of the reform and opening-up policy the Chinese
government began to set up an unemployment insurance system
in 1986 to adapt to the changes in the operating mechanism
of state-owned enterprises and the major reform of the labor
system, so as to guarantee basic livelihood for laid-off
employees. In 1999, the Chinese government issued the
Regulations on Unemployment Insurance, pushing the
unemployment insurance system building onto a new stage of
development. This system covers all urban enterprises and
institutions and their staff, whereby all enterprises and
institutions and their staff must pay the insurance
premiums, the former paying 2 percent of their wage bill and
the latter 1 percent of their personal wages. Three
conditions are to be met to enjoy the benefits of the
unemployment insurance: One full year of the insurance
premium has been paid; suspension of employment is not
voluntary; and unemployment has been registered and
application for reemployment filed. Unemployment insurance
benefits consist mainly of unemployment insurance money,
which the beneficiary can draw every month, with the
standard lower than the minimum wage but higher than the
minimum living allowance for urban residents. The period for
drawing insurance money depends on the length of period for
which one has paid the premiums, the maximum being 24
months. If the employed person is ill during the period he
or she is entitled to draw unemployment insurance money, he
or she is also entitled to medical subsidies. If the
unemployed person dies during this period, his or her family
can receive funeral subsidies and his or her dependants can
receive pension for the deceased. In addition, the
unemployed person may receive vocational training and
subsidies for job agency services when drawing the
unemployment insurance money. In recent years, the
coverage of unemployment insurance has grown continuously,
with the number of the insurance policy underwriters
increasing from 79.28 million in 1998 to 103.55 million in
2001. The number of people who did not draw unemployment
insurance money was 3.12 million in 2001. With the
improvement of the unemployment insurance system, the basic
livelihood guarantee system for laid-offs from state-owned
enterprises is being gradually orbited into this system. The Industrial Injury Insurance System In the
late 1980s, the Chinese government began its reform of
insurance covering injuries suffered on the job. In 1996,
the government issued the Trial Procedures for Industrial
Injury Insurance for Enterprise Employees, to be followed by
the establishment of relevant systems in some of the
regions. In the same year, the Standards for Appraising
Industrial Injuries and Disabilities Caused by Occupational
Diseases was adopted by the government department concerned,
providing the basis for such appraisal. The Trial
Procedures for Industrial Injury Insurance for Enterprise
Employees states that industrial injury insurance premiums
shall be paid by enterprises instead of by employees
themselves. The rate of industrial injury insurance premium
varies according to different trades, and it may fluctuate
with the situation of the individual enterprise. The rate of
premiums is determined on the basis of the level of
industrial injury risks and that of occupational danger in
different trades. Based on the trade insurance rates, the
specific premium rate of the year for an enterprise is
decided according to its actual number of industrial
injuries and risks and the outlays of the insurance funds in
the previous year. Payment of industrial injury
insurance funds covers mainly medical costs sustained during
the treatment of the injury, and the injury or disability
subsidies, pension for the disabled person or family of a
deceased person, and injury or disability nursing charge,
all of which are to be determined according to the degree of
disability upon termination of the medical treatment. By the
end of 2001, the national average rate of industrial injury
insurance premium was about 1 percent, with over 43.45
million employees covered by the industrial injury insurance
scheme. Enterprises not having acceded to such scheme are
responsible for covering the industrial injury expenses
themselves. The Childbirth Insurance System Reform of the childbirth insurance system started in
some enterprises in China in 1988. Based on a summing-up of
the experience gained, the Chinese government mapped out the
Trial Procedures for Childbirth Insurance for Enterprise
Employees in 1994, which stipulates that the childbirth
insurance premiums shall be paid by enterprises instead of
by employees themselves. The insurance benefits cover mainly
medical treatment for childbirth and monthly childbirth
allowance for employees during maternity leave. By the end
of 2001, the national average childbirth insurance expense
rate was 0.7 percent, with 34.55 million employees covered
by the insurance scheme. Enterprises not having acceded to
such scheme are responsible for paying the childbirth
expenses for their employees. The Minimum Living
Standard Security System In the early years after the
founding of the People’s Republic of China, the
government set up a social relief system for the urban and
rural poor. In 1993, it began to reform the social relief
system in cities, at the same time seeking to try out a
minimum living standard security system. In 1999, this
security system was established in all cities and organic
county towns throughout the country. In the same year, the
Chinese government officially promulgated the Regulations on
Guaranteeing Urban Residents’ Minimum Standard of
Living to ensure the basic livelihood of all urban
residents. Funds for this purpose are included in the
fiscal budgets of the local people’s governments,
which determine the minimum living standard according to the
cost necessary for maintaining the basic livelihood of the
local urbanites. Urban residents whose average family income
is lower than the minimum living standard can apply for the
minimum living allowance. Investigation of the
family’s income shall be conducted before issuance of
the minimum living allowance, the level of which is
calculated in terms of the difference between the family
per-capita income and the minimum living standard. In
2001, there were 11.707 million urban residents nationwide
drawing the minimum living allowance, with 2.301 billion
yuan for the minimum living allowance coming from the
central finance. In recent years, part of the rural areas
has started to set up a similar minimum living standard
security system. The Social Welfare System The
social welfare system is a system established by the Chinese
government to provide funds to ensure the livelihood of
senior citizens, orphans and the handicapped persons who are
in extraordinarily straitened circumstances. To protect the
rights and interests of this special group of people, the
government issued the Law of the People’s Republic of
China Guaranteeing the Rights and Interests of Senior
Citizens, Law of the People’s Republic of China on
Protection of the Handicapped and Regulations Concerning
Work on Providing “Five Guarantees” in the Rural
Areas. The laws stipulate that in cities elderly widows and
widowers who are childless and helpless and living alone,
and eligible handicapped persons and orphans shall be
supported and reside in special concentrated homes, while a
combination of concentrated and scattered forms shall apply
to those in the rural areas. Concentrated establishments
include social welfare homes, old-age homes, sanatoriums,
and children’s welfare homes. For handicapped persons,
government aid efforts include the formulation of
preferential policies for establishing social welfare
enterprises of diverse types to help create job
opportunities for those who are able to work. China
has achieved marked progress in its social welfare work. By
the end of 2001, there were 3,327 government-run social
welfare institutions with 191,000 inmates, 35,000
collective-run social welfare institutions with 668,000
inmates, 934 private-run social welfare institutions with
34,000 inmates, and 38,000 social welfare enterprises
employing 699,000 handicapped people. Meanwhile, special
lotteries have been instituted to collect funds for social
welfare undertakings. In 2001 alone, the funds raised for
these undertakings reached 4.2 billion yuan. The
Special Care and Placement System This refers to the
system aimed at compensating or commending the special group
of people who have rendered meritorious services to the
state and society. At present, more than 38 million people
are included in this category. To ensure their rights and
interests, the government has issued the Regulations on
Honoring Revolutionary Martyrs, Regulations on Special Care
and Treatment for Servicemen and Regulations on the
Resettlement of Ex-Servicemen in Cities and Towns. These
regulations stipulate that a regular and fixed-amount
subsidy shall be given to the key recipients, such as
dependents of fallen servicemen, disabled revolutionary
servicemen and demobbed veterans, that dependents of
conscripts be granted special allowances; that medical costs
be reduced or waived for disabled revolutionary servicemen
and other key special-care recipients; that demobbed
soldiers shall enjoy a just-for-once job assignment from the
government and those who wish to find jobs on their own be
given subsidy in one lump sum. Special-care allowances to
the tune of 29.2 billion yuan were allocated from state
budgets at all levels from 1996 to 2001. The Natural
Disaster Relief System China frequently suffers the
ravages of natural disasters, such as floods, droughts,
windstorms and hailstorms, which have adversely affected
people’s lives. The Chinese government has set up a
special social relief system to relieve the sufferings of
victims of unexpected natural calamities. Every year, relief
funds are allocated from government budgets at central and
local levels for this purpose. From 1996 to 2001, such
expenditures reached 21.26 billion yuan-worth nationwide,
providing food, clothing and quilts for 390 million disaster
victims. This disaster relief system has gone a long way
toward guaranteeing the basic livelihood of the people in
the disaster-stricken areas. The Social Mutual Help
System Mutual help among neighbors is one of the
Chinese nation’s fine traditions. Issued in 2000, the
Law of the People’s Republic of China on Public
Welfare Donations institutionalizes and encourages regular
donations for social welfare. In 2001, civil affairs
departments received 1.59 billion yuan of donations from the
general public (including goods converted into money). The
Chinese government also encourages enterprises, institutions
and mass organizations to organize efforts to help the poor
shake off poverty and get rich. Governments at the
grassroots levels also operate community services for the
poor and needy. Since 1994, trade unions at all levels have
organized “heart-warming activities” every year
to offer help to badly-off families. Over the past few
years, a total of 10.44 billion yuan for this purpose have
been raised and sympathy visits paid to families of 39.75
million poverty-stricken employees, model workers, retirees,
and injured, sick or disabled employees. IV.
Development in the Early Period of the 21st Century With the implementation of the Tenth Five-Year Plan,
for National Economic and Social Development (2001-2005) in
2001, China’s labor and social security buildup has
entered a new phase of development. During the early stage
of the new century, these efforts face both problems to be
solved and new opportunities for development. The overall
progress of the reform and opening-up and modernization
drive has created favorable conditions for solving the
problems of employment and social security. The further
growth of the national economy and the increase of economic
strength have provided a firm material foundation for the
enlargement of employment and the improvement of social
security. The market-oriented employment mechanism and
social security system now basically in place across China
have already laid a good foundation for further promotion of
the labor and social security undertakings. At the same
time, the Chinese government is also fully aware that the
employment problem in both the rural and urban areas will
remain sharp, and structural unemployment will become more
serious for a long time to come. Labor relations are
expected to become more complicated, the aging of the
population and the increase of unemployment will put more
pressure on social security, and promotion of social
security in rural areas will still have a long way to go. Targets and Tasks The targets for labor and
social security development in the early part of this
century are as follows: initially forming a comparatively
complete labor and social security system corresponding to
the development level of China’s productive forces and
meeting the requirements of the socialist market economy;
ensuring well-nigh full employment and basic social security
for the majority of workers; safeguarding the legal rights
and interests of both employees and employers; enhancing the
material and cultural wellbeing of rural and urban
residents; and promoting economic development and social
stability. The main tasks are to gradually improve the
quality of workers and the employment structure, initially
form a market-oriented employment mechanism, strive to
promote employment, standardize and improve the statistics
on unemployment rate, and control the registered rural and
urban unemployment rate to within 5 percent; actively adjust
labor relations and keep them harmonious and stable; improve
the macro regulation and control system of income
distribution, work out a rational income distribution
relationship, and achieve an approximately 5 percent annual
increase in both the per capita disposable income of urban
residents and the net per capita income of rural residents;
speed up the development of the urban social security
system, improve the methods and operating mechanism of fund
raising, and promote the socialization of social security
management and services; with farmers’ old-age
security and health security of multiple forms as the guide,
actively explore in rural areas a basic security system
suited to the socialist market economy system and the
country’s economic development level and set up a
system to help the weak group in society to take care of
their own life and work. Policies and Measures ? Carry out an active policy for
promoting employment and do everything possible to enlarge
the scale of employment. Rapid economic growth shall be
maintained, domestic demands shall be expanded, and new
employment opportunities created to the full, so as to
increase total employment. The employment structure for
labor force should be improved, and great efforts made to
develop labor-intensive industries and enterprises. Tertiary
industry, small and medium-sized enterprises and the
non-public sectors of the economy shall be taken as the main
channels for the enlargement of employment. Preferential
policies shall be further carried out so as to help laid-off
and jobless people to find reemployment. ?
Establish a unified and standardized labor market,
make a unified plan for rural and urban employment, and
ameliorate the employment service system. The reform of the
labor personnel system and the household registration system
shall be deepened, and efforts made to guide the orderly
flow of the labor force between urban and rural areas or
between regions so as to promote the transfer of surplus
agricultural labor. The service of public job agencies shall
be improved and community-run job agencies encouraged to
develop along healthy lines. ?
Improve the quality of workers in an all-round way
and adopt flexible forms of employment. The labor reserve
system and employment permit system shall be carried out.
Vocational education, continuing education and reemployment
training shall be strengthened, and the professional
qualification certification system enforced. More attention
shall be paid to job skill training for rural workers, and a
sound job training system established and improved in rural
areas step by step. Flexible forms of employment shall be
adopted, and finding employment on one’s own
encouraged. ? Consolidate and
improve the labor contract system, make great efforts to
carry forward the group contract system and promote the
establishment of a tripartite coordination mechanism for
labor relations. Active efforts shall be made to formulate
and revise the state’s basic labor standards, and a
labor standard system suitable to China’s actual
conditions be perfected. The system of handling labor
disputes shall be further improved, gradually enhancing the
comprehensive ability to prevent and handle labor disputes. ? Promote the reform of the wage and
income distribution system and establish an incentive and
restraining mechanism for income distribution. The minimum
wage system shall be improved and the wage guidelines and
the guidance price level system for the labor market be
enforced across-the-board. Efforts shall be made to continue
the experiments in the collective wage consultation system,
standardize the payment of wages and guarantee the legal
rights and interests of employees with respect to their work
remuneration. ? Deepen the reform of
the social security system, speed up the building of the
social security system and actively implement the pilot
program for its improvement. For this, we need to establish
a reliable and stable social security fund-raising
mechanism, restructure financial expenditure, increase
necessary input and the amount of social security funds, and
rationally adjust the payment rate and substitution level,
and improve the operational efficiency of social security
funds and the efficiency rate of investment. The social
security macro-regulation and supervision system shall be
bettered and its management level and efficiency raised, so
as to ensure the stable, healthy and orderly operation of
the social security system. ?
Improve the basic old-age insurance and basic
medical insurance systems and encourage employing units,
where conditions are favorable, to set up annuity and
supplementary medical insurance programs for their
employees. Further steps shall be taken to improve the
unemployment insurance system and make the basic livelihood
guarantee system for laid-off personnel from state-owned
enterprises part of the unemployment insurance scheme.
Development of the industrial injury and childbirth
insurance systems shall be accelerated. The basic old-age
pension insurance system for employees of state organs and
institutions shall be improved. The system for ensuring a
minimum standard of living for urban residents shall be
standardized. We shall accelerate community building and
promote the socialization of social security. We shall
explore diverse forms of security and push forward the
building of the basic security system in the rural areas. We
need to improve our policies concerning social relief,
social mutual aid, the special care and placement system and
social welfare, and safeguard the legal rights and interests
of women, minors, the elderly and the handicapped. ? Establish a supervision and
management system concerning social security funds through a
combination of administrative supervision, social
supervision and internal institutional control. While
establishing and improving the social security system, we
shall explore the right path for investment management and
establish a fund supervision and management system
coordinative with the fund management system in accordance
with the fund management principles of different security
projects. We shall work hard to guarantee or increase the
value of the social security funds and resolve the
operational risks of the security funds, so as to safeguard
social safety and stability. ? Press
ahead with the legal system building in the labor and social
security fields, improve the labor and social security
supervision system, steadily enhance the overall quality of
supervision and law-enforcement personnel, carry out
supervision activities of diverse forms, and push forward
the organic integration of labor security supervision and
law-enforcement departments with all social sectors in
implementing legal supervision. We shall strengthen the
building of the labor security management information system
and the popularization of the scientific findings in this
aspect so as to improve the scientific, standardized,
institutionalized and IT management of the labor and social
security undertakings. China will continue to actively
participate in international activities in the fields of
labor and social security, and expand cooperation and
exchange with other countries, so as to continue to play its
promotional role in international labor affairs. We will
adapt ourselves to the new situation arising from our WTO
entry, and work hard consistently to carry our labor and
social security cause further forward. (china.org.cn,
April 29, 2002)
|
|
|