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BEIJING, March 7 (Xinhuanet) -- The target of keeping
urban registered unemployment rate to 4.7 percent this year, 0.2 percent higher
than the 2003 figure, is based on the real situation in China's labor market, a
senior researcher said Sunday.
The target was proposed Saturday by
Ma Kai, minister of the State Development and Reform Commission, which is in
charge of drafting China's economic and social development blueprint.
Last year, the Chinese government announced that it
would strive to bring the urban registered unemployment rate under 4.5 percent,
and the rate came out at 4.3 percent by the year end.
With a population of nearly 1.3 billion people, China
would have additional 400,000 unemployed people if the joblessness rate in the
urban areas increased by 0.1 percentage point, said Mo Rong, a research fellow
with the Ministry of Labor and Social Security.
This year, the government has to set the unemployment
rate at 4.7 percent so as to deal with an expected increase in labor supply,Mo
said.
According to the researcher, approximately 15 million
people are looking for jobs in cities annually as a result of a baby boom and
transfer of rural labor to urban areas; the 2.6 million laid-off workers at
government-sponsored reemployment training centers will soon join the forces
vying for limited job opportunities; and more people may lose their jobs along
with their enterprises' industrial restructuring and product mix improvement to
cope with the new situation in the wake of China's WTO entry.
As one of the substantial government measures to
resolved unemployment related problems, Mo said, the Ministry of Labor and
Social Security would work harder to ensure that 9 million jobs becreated and 5
million laid-off workers reemployed this year.
Another major problem the government has to deal
with, according to experts, is the big number of farmers who have lost land to
till in the process of urbanization.
The number of the farmers is predicted at some 40
million and will increase by 2 million every year.
Premier Wen Jiabao has urged rigid control over the
requisition of farmland and promptlyy provide land-losing farmers land with
reasonable compensation, which is expected to be included in the Chinese
Constitution that will undergo some amendments during the on-going session of
the legislature, the National People's Congress.
Although a national policy toward the issue is yet to
be promulgated, some localities have resorted measures to help the farmers. In
Jinhua city of east China's Zhejiang province, where private firms account for
the major part of local economy, due compensation, old-age pensions, medical
insurance, professional training and accommodation are offered to the local
farmers.
In some places in Beijing and Sichuan, those farmers
who have lost their cropland because of urbanization are covered by a
ruralinsurance policy, and their employment is listed as the criteria for the
assessment of the work of local governments. Enditem |