BEIJING, Nov. 17 -- The government expects the pension
network to cover 60 percent of the country's farmers by 2010 and 80 percent by
2015, a senior rural insurance official said Sunday.
Releasing the rural pension plan till 2020, Zhao
Dianguo, director of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security's rural
insurance department, said the central government plans to set up a pension
network for China's 730 million farmers, for which a detailed timetable has
already been prepared.
An amount equal to about 2 percent of the central
treasury can help set up a basic pension system for rural areas, he said at the
launching of China Human Development Report (CHDR) in Beijing.
The pension system will be based on the experiences
gathered from pilot projects in more than 300 counties. "A pension system would
not only solve the social insecurity problem, but also act as a stimulus for
higher consumption," Zhao said.
"The more secure rural people feel, the more money
they will spend," he said echoing the message in the CHDR, which calls for equal
provisions of basic public services for every Chinese.
Comprehensive institutional and policy reforms are
essential for China if it wants to provide better health services, education and
social security to its people, Khalid Malik, UN Resident Coordinator in China,
said.
"The government's agenda accords priority to
providing basic services, and its fast-paced action to do so will go a long way
in easing the challenges of the financial crisis and economic slowdown," Malik
said.
It took one-and-half years of research for the China
Institute for Reform and Development to prepare the CHDR, which was commissioned
by the UN.
The report says China's human development index is at
its highest, and nearing the level of "high human development". But human
development in the country still faces major challenges - widening gaps between
urban and rural areas, between the prosperous coastal regions and the poorer
interior regions, between men and women, and between registered urban residents
and migrant workers.
The core recommendation in the report is giving all
Chinese people the right to a clearly defined set of basic public services
framed by common standards.
"In this new era of development, real access to good
quality basic public services should be considered a fundamental right of all
Chinese and a responsibility of the government," the report says.
(Source: China Daily)