Urban citizenship, social security coverage, a pension after
retirement. For Peng Juan, a 34-year-old rural migrant worker in
Central China's Henan Province, these were just dreams, not
reality.
This year, however, her dreams have come true. Thanks to new
policies adopted by the government of Yancheng County, where Peng
has lived for the last four years, all migrant workers from rural
areas are now being given the same treatment as their urban
compatriots.
This means they can get a Hukou, or permanent urban residence
permit, just by proving that they are employed. They can also
choose whatever occupation they want and join the city's medical,
pension and other insurance plans.
And their children will be accepted and treated similarly as urban
kids by local schools.
"For me, it's like a pie falling from the sky," said Peng, who was
recently hired by the Rikang Company, a booming local private
enterprise.
In
the past, she could only make ends meet by doing odd jobs. The old
policy said "good enterprises only wanted to hire urbanites."
For millions of rural migrant workers driven to the cities by their
yearning for a better and more modern life, what has happened in
small and obscure Yancheng might be the start of a revolution that
could change their destiny.
The bold "reform experiment," as the local government in Yancheng
calls it, has been sanctioned and backed by key central government
ministries, including the Ministry of Labour and Social Security
and the State Development Planning Commission.
Similar "experiments" are also underway in 15 other counties across
China.
This reform is intended to abolish discrimination in the workplace
for laborers of urban and rural origins, establish an equal
employment system for urban and rural laborers and draw migrant
workers into the social security system, said Wang Aiwen, an
official with the Ministry of Labour and Social Security.
There are more than 80 million rural migrant workers in China. Most
of them swarmed into the cities in the last decade, when the
government began shifting from a planned economy to a market
one.
But many migrant laborers have had bitter experiences in their
urban lives: their job opportunities have often been restricted to
the most dirty and back-breaking work scorned by city dwellers and
they have been underpaid and excluded from the social security
systems all Chinese cities are now establishing.
Before the reform, migrant workers in Yancheng were even not
allowed to sign labor contracts longer than a year.
Local enterprises were frequently advised to leave better jobs for
urban laid-off workers, said Zhou Qifang, the deputy county
magistrate.
Migrant workers also had to pay a variety of fees. The "urban
accommodation and management fee" rose to more than 400 yuan
(US$50) a year per head.
"But the situation is changing, and both the migrant workers and
local enterprises welcome that change," Zhou said.
Tian Xinmin, deputy general manager at Rikang Company, said the
reform has greatly simplified the procedure for hiring a rural
laborer and enabled his company to recruit competent workers. Now,
more than 70 percent of the company's 400-strong employees are
rural migrant workers.
The reform in Yancheng has removed the "identity gap" between urban
and rural citizens and offered them equal treatment in employment,
thus reflecting the principles of "equality" and "fair play"
stressed by the society after China's entry into the World Trade
Organization, said Shi Maosheng, president of the Zhengzhou
University law school.
The reform has also resulted in "safe passage" for China's huge
rural surplus workforce, who will be most severely affected by the
government's push to modernize, Shi said.
With a rural population of more than 900 million, China has the
world's largest rural surplus workforce. Experts said it could
reach 200 million by 2005.
Officials from the Ministry of Labor and Social Security hinted
that China may use its cities, especially those newly developed
small cities and towns, to handle the surplus rural workforce.
"The thriving of the non-public sectors and the mushrooming of
small cities and towns have made the time ripe to form a unified
labor market in China," Wang said. "We hope a breakthrough can
first be achieved in some small and medium-sized cities."
(China
Daily August 14, 2002)
|