More than 600 million yuan worth of Guangzhou pension
funds -- that had been invested in commercial operations -- cannot
be recovered.
That was the message that Cui Renquan, director of the
Guangzhou labor and social security bureau, delivered to an
investigative group from the Standing Committee of the Guangdong Provincial People's Congress on
Monday.
Cui described the disappearance of the pension fund as
a problem left over from the mid-1990s.
A document issued in 1993 by the then Ministry of
Labor encouraged officials to transfer a portion of their pension
funds to social credit agencies for investment. Accordingly, the
pension fund company affiliated with Cui's bureau invested some of
their funds.
But the following year the ministries of labor and
finance jointly issued a new document banning the investment of
pension funds on the open market and demanding that money withdrawn
from pension funds for commercial operations be
recovered.
In 1998, a total of 1 billion yuan of pension funds
were still tied up in commercial operations and could not be
recovered, according to Cui.
In 2000, Guangzhou set up a special office tasked with
recovering pension funds, with a deputy mayor in charge. It also
set aside 50 million yuan in a reserve fund to offset possible
losses.
A court ruling has now been made and is being
implemented in 19 cases involving 813 million yuan, 90 percent of
the funds tied up in commercial operations.
The National Audit Office audited the misuse of the
pension fund last year but their conclusions are not
known.
Mayor Zhang Guangning's remark might give some clues
to the answer.
"If the pension fund cannot be recovered, the
Guangzhou city government will follow the recommendation of the
National Audit Office and use the reserve fund to make up the
shortfall," Mayor Zhang was quoted as saying.
(Xinhua News Agency April 5, 2007)
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