As Guangzhou this southern metropolis is rapidly approaching its
upper limit of 15 million population fuelled by the influx of
migrant workers, the public is divided on whether to limit the
inflow of these workers.
The city's present population stands at 12 million and the
migrant population exceeds 5 million.
At a recent forum on what the authorities should do to deal with
the expanding population, many citizens suggested the municipal
authorities do more to limit the influx of migrant workers so as to
improve the social security situation and ease the pressure it puts
on city facilities.
Guo Peilin is among those with such views.
"My purse has been stolen 12 times, and I've had my necklace
snatched once since I settled in Guangzhou in the early 1990s," Guo
said.
Official statistics show that of the 100,000 crimes reported
every year during the past five years, about 85 percent of the
suspects are migrants.
"Many big cities, including Beijing and Shanghai, have set
limits on the migrant population and their public security is much
better," Guo said.
She suggested that only those with jobs should be allowed to
settle in Guangzhou.
Peng Peng, director of the Guangzhou Academy of Social Sciences,
however, does not agree with limiting the influx of migrant
workers,
"It will not make any sense at all," he said. "Guangzhou needs
multiple levels of human resources and the demand for migrant
workers is enormous.
"What the government really should do is strengthen efforts to
better manage the migrant population instead of simply shutting all
doors to them," Peng said.
Peng's views are supported by Li Junrong, a human resources
manager of Guangzhou Huanan Information System Integration.
"Guangzhou is in great need of migrant workers. Any action to
set limits will worsen the situation.
"Migrant workers do jobs that local citizens are unwilling to
do," Li said.
However, during the city's annual people's congress held at the
end of 2006, officials from the municipal government said they were
studying the possibility of capping the influx of the migrant
population.
"The municipal government is considering putting a limit on
industries that need to hire migrant workers, and the city will
take more measures to deal with public security problems relating
to migrants by promoting a free registry system," said Zhang
Guangning, mayor of Guangzhou.
(China Daily March 7, 2007)
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