BEIJING, March 3 (Xinhua) -- As legislators roll up for the "two sessions"
-- the annual meetings of China's top legislature and political advisory body --
a number of key issues are in the spotlight. According to surveys carried out in
the media and on leading websites, the following eight issues are at the
forefront of public attention:
EMPLOYMENT
Despite China's economic boom, more than 84 million urban residents are on
the dole. Experts say China needs to create a whopping 13 million jobs per year
to prevent unemployment rising.
The government, which has taken more than 100 million people out of poverty
since 1986, spent 13.4 billion yuan (1.7 billion U.S. dollars) on poverty
alleviation last year. However, the employment situation in rural areas remains
difficult, with rural laborers continuing to migrate to cities in search of
work.
A staggering 4.95 million students will graduate from institutions of
higher learning this summer, 820,000 more than last year. About 1.4 million of
them --- three out of 10 --- are unlikely to find jobs when they graduate.
SOCIAL SECURITY
Only a small proportion of Chinese people are covered by the country's
social security system.
The vast majority of the rural poor have no social security. Only 13
million needy farmers receive government handouts, a fraction of the 800 million
people living in the countryside.
Nearly 22 million urban Chinese subsist on monthly handouts of 169 yuan (22
U.S. dollars).
MEDICARE
A 2006 national survey showed 49 percent of Chinese couldn't afford to see
a doctor when they were ill and 30 percent refused to be hospitalized because
the cost was too high.
In recent months, the public have been alarmed by media stories about
privately-run hospitals cheating patients with false diagnoses and aggressively
selling drugs and extra services.
EDUCATION
China's nine-year compulsory education system, which is supposed to be free
and to cover the whole country, does not yet reach all rural areas. In the
cities, parents who want to get their kids into top schools find that they have
to fork out extra money.
There is a mismatch between what is being taught in many of the country's
educational institutions and newly-created job opportunities.
WORKPLACE SAFETY
While work safety is improving, the situation remains grim and compares
badly with other countries. China's coal mines are the world's deadliest, 70
times more dangerous than American coal mines and seven times more dangerous
than coal mines in India or Russia.
INCOME GAP
The income gap is widening. Statistics show that the richest ten percent of
the population now own more than 40 percent of all private assets, while the
poorest 10 percent have less than two percent.
The Gini Coefficient uses zero to indicate equal income distribution while
one represents the largest income disparity.China's GINI Coefficient has reached
0.496, worse than the United States.
LAND EXPROPRIATION
Nearly 200,000 hectares of rural land are taken from farmers every year for
industrial purposes. In some regions, farmland has been given away free to
attract foreign investment.
Land expropriation is the subject Chinese farmers most often complain about
when they petition government officials.
More than 65 percent of rural "mass incidents" are linked to land
expropriation issues.
ENVIRONMENT
Environmental degradation continues to exact a heavy toll. According to the
State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA), 70 percent of China's
rivers and lakes are polluted and more than 300 million people have no access to
clean water.
In 2006, SEPA received 600,000 environmental complaints, an increase of 30
percent on the previous year.
SEPA is understaffed, underfunded and lacks power.
Even though the administration suspended 163 environmentally dangerous
projects in 2006 worth a total of 770bn yuan (96bn U.S. dollars), the nation is
failing to meet its goal of reducing emissions of major pollutants by 10 percent
during the 11th Five-Year Plan period (2006-2010). In 2006, sulphur dioxide
emissions increased by nearly 463,000 tons.