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BEIJING, Sept. 7 (Xinhuanet) - China on Tuesday
publishes its first ever white paper on social security, detailing the current
conditions of the country's social security and the policy the government
adopted in the regard.
"After years of experiments and practice, a social security
framework with Chinese characteristics has taken initial shape," said the white
paper titled China's Social Security and Its Policy,which was issued by the
Information Office of the State Council.
Since China established and improved its socialist
market economy system in the mid-1980s, a series of reforms have been introduced
to change the old social security system practiced under the planned economy,
and a basic framework of a social security system has been set up in China
corresponding to the market economy system, with the central and local
governments sharing specific responsibilities, the white paper noted.
China's social security system includes social
insurance, social welfare, the special care and placement system, social relief
and housing services. As the core of the social security system, social
insurance includes old-age insurance, unemployment insurance, medical insurance,
work-related injury insurance and maternity insurance.
China is now an aging society. As the aging of the
population quickens, the number of elderly people is becoming very large. This
trend will reach its peak in the 2030s, said the white paper.
To guarantee the basic living standards of the
elderly and safeguard their legitimate rights and interests, the Chinese
government has continuously improved the old-age insurance system and reformed
the fund-raising mode in an attempt to establish a multi-level old-age insurance
system marked by sustainable development.
In 2003, the monthly basic pension for enterprise
retirees covered by the basic old-age insurance scheme was 621 yuan ( about75 US
dollars) on average, according to the white paper.
And in the same year, the number of people
participating in thebasic old-age insurance scheme across China reached 155.06
million,116.46 million of whom were employees.
Also in 2003, the basic old-age insurance premium
paid by enterprises nationwide totaled 259.5 billion yuan (31.3 billion
dollars).
While promoting the reform of the enterprise
employment system and setting up a market-oriented employment mechanism, the
Chinesegovernment is speeding up the development and improvement of an
unemployment insurance system to guarantee the basic livelihood ofemployees
after they lose their jobs, to help them find new jobs, and accelerate the
combination of the basic livelihood guarantee system for people laid off from
state-owned enterprises with the unemployment insurance, the white paper said.
By the end of 2003, there were 103.73 million people
who participated in the unemployment insurance scheme, which provided
unemployment insurance benefits of varying time limits to 7.42 million laid-off
employees throughout the year, according to the white paper.
Since 1998, China has also promoted a national reform
of the basic medical insurance system for urban employees, said the whitepaper.
By the end of 2003, some 109.02 million people around
China hadparticipated in the basic medical insurance program, including 79.75
million employees and 29.27 million retirees.
"To press ahead with the improvement of the social
security system is an important task for the Chinese government in its efforts
to build a moderately prosperous society in a comprehensive way," said the white
paper.
But it admitted that establishing a sound social
security system in China is an extremely arduous task.
The white paper pointed out the fact that China is
the biggest developing country with a large population in the world, and its
economic base is weak and the development between regions and between town and
country is unbalanced.
"The Chinese government regards economic development
as the basic prerequisite for improving people's livelihood and effectingsocial
security," said the white paper.
The white paper is divided into 12 parts, including
old-age insurance, unemployment insurance, medical insurance and social security
in rural areas. Enditem |