The "Sunshine Program" which is a government-funded
training project has assisted 7.2 million Chinese rural laborers
find jobs in non-farming sectors since 2004, said Vice Minister of
Agriculture Wei Chao'an on Tuesday.
By the end of October this year 8.3 million rural
laborers had participated work skills training courses in such
industries as manufacturing, construction and services. Of those
86.7 percent found new jobs, said Wei at a symposium in Wuhan,
capital of central China's Hubei Province.
In 2004 six ministries, including agriculture, finance
and education, launched the "Sunshine Program"to offer professional
training to rural laborers, teach them how to lead urban lives and
protect their basic rights.
Under the program each trainee received a subsidy for
training expenses This stood at 100 yuan (US$12.5) per person in
2004 and rose to 171 yuan this year.
Most of the trained laborers secured job contracts
with a term of one year or longer as well as an average monthly
payment of 833 yuan. That wage is 200 yuan more than that of
untrained rural workers and 400 yuan above that of farmers,
according to statistics of 50 counties in 2005.
Over the past three years the program has received
allowances of 1.25 billion yuan from the central government and
more than 1.5 billion yuan from governments at provincial
level.
China has 490 million rural
laborers only 13 percent of whom receive education at or above the
level of senior middle school.
(Xinhua News Agency November 9, 2006)
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