During a Tuesday teleconference, the People's Bank of China (PBOC),
the nation's central bank, and the Ministry of Labor and Social
Security announced that the guaranteed small loan system for
laid-off workers will be extended to cover 100 major cities by the
end of the year.
Vice Premier Huang Ju said the loan system is an important
reemployment policy, and he urged local governments and related
ministries to implement the policy fully.
The Chinese government started encouraging the granting of small
guaranteed loans to the growing ranks of laid-off workers in
2002.
There were 1.2 billion yuan (US$145 million) in such loans
outstanding at the end of May, according to the PBOC.
The Ministry of Finance subsidizes most such loans, which are
typically smaller than 20,000 yuan (US$2,400) and for terms no
longer than two years. Commercial banks are generally reluctant to
grant them owing to their low returns and high risks.
To
help the loans play a bigger role in the nation's reemployment
drive, the risk-sharing mechanisms need to be improved and
procedures simplified. Efforts need to be made to ensure that
fiscal subsidies are promptly granted, and financial institutions
need to improve their services.
The central bank and the labor ministry also urged greater
financial support for small and medium-sized enterprises, which are
major generators of new jobs.
More than 28 million workers in the state sector had been laid off
by the end of last year as a result of the reform of state-owned
enterprises. Nearly 19 million of them have found work.
Tuesday's teleconference was attended by senior officials from the
State Council and related government ministries, and major banks
and local governments of 31 provinces, autonomous regions and
municipalities.
(China Daily July 7, 2004)
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