Civil Affairs Minister Doji Cering urged financial departments at
all levels to combine efforts with the ministry to ensure the goal
of "covering the country's urban population with a minimum wage
guarantee" by the middle of this year.
Up
to 12.35 million people nationwide have enjoyed the guaranteed
minimum wage thus far, and more than 90 percent of the wages went
to unemployed workers and their families, according to the Ministry
of Civil Affairs.
So
far, 12 provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities across the
country, including Beijing and Shanghai, Jiangsu, Guangdong and
Heilongjiang provinces, have essentially fulfilled the goal of
"covering all those who should be covered."
Civil affairs departments at all levels are currently working on
budgets for this year devoted to helping the impoverished and will
soon submit them to financial departments, according to the
minister.
The central government will continue to increase its financial
contributions to those budgets this year, he said.
The Ministry of Labor and Social Security also issued an order on
Wednesday demanding local authorities to earmark at least 15 to 20
percent of this year's budget to help the poor, mainly in the
delivery of unemployment subsidies and retirement pensions.
In
Northeast China's Liaoning Province, 1.06 million poor residents
were covered by a guaranteed minimum wage policy by the end of last
year, an increase of 300,000 compared with 2000.
Shenzhen in South China's Guangdong Province delivered more than 1
million yuan (US$120,000) in subsidies to around 700 poor families
last year.
In
North China's Shanxi Province, subsidies from local governments
have been issued to more than 400,000 impoverished urban residents,
ensuring that "they will have dumplings to eat" during the upcoming
Spring Festival - the traditional Chinese Lunar New Year.
For the rural poor, the State Council Poverty Alleviation Office
pledged to earmark a total of 10.6 billion yuan (US$1.3 billion)
from the State budget this year to certain poor counties designated
by the State.
Since Shanghai initiated the guaranteed minimum wage system in
1993, the practice has become popular across the country. By
September 1999, all of China's cities and most of its counties had
implemented such a system.
(China Daily February 9, 2002)
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