BEIJING, March 14 -- A law to help create more jobs is expected to be
tabled for discussion during next year's session of the National People's
Congress (NPC), a leading social security scholar said yesterday.
Zheng Gongcheng, a NPC deputy and director of the Social Security Research
Centre of Renmin University of China, said that the Ministry of Labour and
Social Security had finished drafting the law, and that it is already undergoing
the legal procedure.
"If everything goes smoothly, it will be tabled for the legislation next
year," he said.
The severe unemployment situation in the country is unlikely to experience
a "fundamental change" within the next 10-15 years, Zheng said.
"It is the government's responsibility to adopt active policies to create
more jobs," he added.
The law will require administrative departments to play an important role
in promoting employment, and will include unemployment security and insurance
policies as well as some related assistance policies, he said.
China's goal to contain the unemployment rate to within 5 per cent in the
11th Five-Year Plan (2006-10) period is an "arduous goal" to achieve, Zheng
said.
"The sharp rate of increase in unemployment cannot be reversed in a short
time," he said. "What we can do is to prevent it from growing too fast,"
This year's unemployed population is expected to surpass 9 million, he
said.
Zheng said several types of job seekers formed the main bulk of the
unemployed population.
China's colleges and universities, which have been expanded in recent
years, are pouring more and more graduates into the job market.
The number of graduates was just over 1 million in 2000, but the number is
expected to quadruple in July this year, Zheng said.
There were 15 million college graduates during the 10th Five-Year Plan
(2000-05) period, and this number is expected to become 27 million in the next
five-year period.
Another major reason is the large-scale transfer of rural labourers, which
poured millions of migrant workers into urban areas, Zheng said.
Laid-off workers
And as China steps up its reform of State-owned enterprises, more laid-off
workers will have to join the job-seeking group in the country.
Though the government has carried out some preferential policies to help
laid-off workers to find work, these policies are not well carried out,
according to Zheng.
He cited the small sum loan policy, which is designed to support laid-off
workers to start their own businesses, as an unsuccessful example.
"Most commercial banks are reluctant to grant small loans because it is
time-consuming and often has low profitability," he said.
Zheng suggested that a special "employment bank" be set up by the
government to deal exclusively with granting small loans to unemployed people.
"The bank will have no profit-driven goals and would not face market
competition," he said.
The other solution is to demand commercial banks shoulder their
responsibility in granting small loans according to their total assets.
(Source: China Daily)