One in seven workers on the Chinese mainland was either
self-employed or working with a private company last year, marking
a rapid expansion of the booming private sector.
According to the latest survey by the State Administration for
Industry and Commerce (SAIC), about 120 million people worked in
domestically-owned private enterprises, up 9.5 percent from
2005.
Other key findings are:
The turnover of private and individual businesses rose 16.1
percent for companies and 9.4 percent for the self-employed.
About 1.32 million business entities run by the self-employed
were registered in 2006, up 5.4 percent from 2005, bringing the
total number of individual business to nearly 26 million.
More than 80 percent of individual businesses were in the
service sector, mainly wholesale and retailing.
Privately owned firms paid about 349.5 billion yuan (US$45.21
billion) in taxes last year, 9.3 percent of the national tax
revenue, up 28.7 percent from a year earlier.
The self-employed paid 119.5 billion yuan in taxes, accounting
for 3.2 percent of the country's total.
In an earlier report, the SAIC estimated that the total economic
output by the private sector accounted for 40 percent of the
country's GDP last year.
"Such steady growth has alleviated the country's employment
pressure," an SAIC statement said.
About 2.53 million laid-off workers found jobs in the private
sector last year.
(China Daily May 8, 2007)
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