China's central government plans to extend pension insurance to all
urban workers and is encouraging efforts to establish a pension
system for the country's 900 million rural residents.
A
decision passed by the Third Plenary Session of the 16th Central
Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) in October set new
goals for China's social security system which would result in
great benefits, said Liu Yongfu, vice minister of labor and social
security.
Liu made the remarks at a recent symposium on "the socialist market
economic system and China's social security".
Hu
Xiaoyi, an official with the Ministry of Labor and Social Security
said the decision accepted for first time all urban workers into
the pension insurance scheme, whereas previously coverage had been
confined to employees of publicly owned enterprises.
"It's a new idea, and also a new task for us," Hu said.
The decision also demanded the establishment of province-based
planning for pension insurance funding and promoted the idea of
establishing nationwide basic funding if conditions permitted.
The new request for more advanced levels of general planning would
impose new challenges on China's social security work, experts
said.
Jia Kang, head of the financial science research institute under
the Ministry of Finance said China was encouraging a more flexible
employment system as small and medium sized enterprises were
employing more staff and the ranks of the self-employed were also
growing.
As
a result, increasing numbers of migrant rural laborers, employees
of smaller companies and freelancers had surfaced to pose fresh new
tasks for the social security system.
"However, China's current planning for social security funding,
either at county level or city level, discourages the diversion of
the pension fund from one place to another as laborers migrate," he
said.
"A
perfect social security system should enable laborers to flow
freely in nationwide markets, without boundaries formed by a
regionally planned social security fund."
While the current social security system does not cover China's900
million rural population, the decision proposed that rural areas
base the pension insurance system on households, with aid from the
community or state. It also encouraged regions with stronger
economic conditions to explore mechanisms pledging a minimum
standard of living for rural residents.
Other breakthroughs in the decision included requests for
maintaining the insurance through pregnancy and while recuperating
from injuries suffered on the job.
The decision also explored the option of assigning part of
state-owned assets to supporting social security funding.
(Xinhua News Agency November 20, 2003)
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