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Beijing, April 29 -- The average income for people
working in the State sector rose by 16 per cent year on year to reach 5,000 yuan
(US$630) for the first quarter of the year.
Meanwhile, the average income for the sector
including employees working in governments, public-funded institutions and all
companies (both private and State-owned) rose by 15 per cent year on year to
reach 4,700 yuan (US$590) for the first three months of the year.
That was a five-year record, the National Bureau of
Statistics said on its website on Friday.
There were more than 109 million people working in
governments, public-funded institutions and State-owned/private companies last
year.
For collective enterprises which are often set up
with both private and public cash the average income for the three-month period
rose by 15 per cent to 2,800 yuan (US$350).
Income growth averaged about 13 per cent in other
sectors. There was no information about migrant workers' incomes in the report.
"It is noticeable that as China's economy booms,
incomes for this group of urbanites are growing fast," said Zhuang Jian, a
senior economist with the Beijing office of the Asian Development Bank.
He added that income hikes could help foster domestic
spending and reduce the economy's heavy reliance on exports and fixed-asset
investment.
But other experts warned that ordinary people,
especially migrant workers, were still being poorly paid.
In the manufacturing sector, pay growth lagged behind
GDP growth by about 5 per cent per year between 1998 and 2003, said Su Hainan,
director of the Labour Salary Institute under the Ministry of Labour and Social
Security. In some coastal areas, factories do not even have enough workers
because of the low pay for migrant workers, he added.
Figures from the statistics bureau also showed that
rural residents' average net income rose by 11 per cent to 1,100 yuan (US$140)
for the first three months of the year.
Experts said the urban-rural income gap would keep
growing.
According to the United Nations, Shanghai residents
enjoy a standard of living on par with people in Portugal. Yet living standards
in some of the most remote parts of China are closer to those in some poor
African countries.
Incomes of laid-off workers have also dropped, but Xu
Fengxian, a researcher at the Institute of Economics under the Chinese Academy
of Social Sciences, said urbanites' disposable income was "enjoying the best
period for years. The booming economy is fostering the rise of residents'
incomes."
According to a survey released by the National Bureau
of Statistics on Thursday of 56,000 urban families, per capita disposable income
rose by 12 per cent in the first quarter, reaching 3,300 yuan (US$410).
Inflation-adjusted, that was a rise of 10.8 per cent,
up 2.2 percentage points over the same period last year.
But Hao Jinmin, an employee at the Beijing-based
National Library of China, said although people earn more, the cost of many
things, from vegetables to houses, is rising.
(Source: Chinadaily.com.cn)
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