Category Working in China

China’s efforts for labour balance

CHINA’S monetary policy will not shift substantially in response to the global downturn. But employers in China should increase wages by 10 per cent in order to attract workers as the labour surplus disappears.

These are among the rare insights opened, through China’s leading business publication, Caijing magazine, into the economic advice the country’s leaders are being given as they face multiple challenges.

Cai Fang, director of the Institute of Population and Labour Economics at the prestigious Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, has spoken to the magazine about his message to Premier Wen Jiabao and the State Council, China’s cabinet, during a closed-door meeting with eight leading economists.

He said: “We talked about whether economic growth will slow, how to contain inflation and stimulate growth, and whether China should maintain its tight monetary policy.”

China’s economists, he said, “are split on the two major macro tasks: fighting inflation and stimulating growth. However, we generally agreed that monetary policy should remain as it is. We should neither loosen it nor tighten it further.”

Cai said officials at the State Council were especially concerned about the extent to which the slowdown of gross domestic product growth — from 11.9 per cent in 2007 to 10.4 per cent in the first half of 2008 — will hurt employment. “Should we retain the growth momentum to ensure high employment rates?” This, he said, was his main focus. “The growth rate is flattening out, while unemployment is climbing.”

In the last quarter, ending June 30, registered urban unemployment reached 4.1 per cent. Clearly it was rising, he said. Before this year, it was declining.

“A few years ago, China’s registered unemployment rate didn’t reflect the real situation because it excluded laid-off workers. But the number of laid-off workers has largely been reduced in recent years due to the Government’s re-employment efforts. Now the registered rate is close to what it is in reality.”

But in China, he said, “economic growth and employment are not closely related. One reason is that Chinese policy favours large size companies. The preference became even more obvious when the Government adjusted its macro-economic policies recently.”

Companies receiving government backing, he said, “are usually enterprises with high profits, low emissions, low rates of pollution and less reliance on resources. In reality, they are big companies, especially state-controlled ones, equipped with better technologies.”

His institute surveyed 17 industries and found that capital-intensive companies, most of which are large firms, contribute substantially to GDP growth but are not so impressive in terms of creating new jobs.

Last year, the control of credit was tightened in both quantity and quality. Better risk controls and higher earnings were required for lending, and that situation diverted loans toward larger companies and away from small ones because, he said, “lending to them became even riskier”.

Most unemployment, he said, is structural rather than cyclical. Coupled with the low employment rate of college graduates, the rate even shows signs of rising.

Cai said private companies, most of them small and medium-sized, had played an important part in absorbing labour displaced by massive lay-offs from state-owned factories.

But “the current economic slowdown, however, has hit them hard. And statistics tend to miss unemployment in these sectors”, with migrant workers not being registered at all.

Tight monetary policy was not good news for such businesses, he said. “Historically, it’s hard for these companies to borrow from banks, and they turn to the market for financing.” With the central bank issuing the commercial banks with firm instructions to tighten lending, the SMEs tend to borrow privately from “grey” sources, which “leads to skyrocketing interest rates”.

Tax revenues rose rapidly in the first half of 2008, he said, so, in compensation for the adjustments required from vulnerable businesses, “it’s widely agreed among scholars that we can cut tax rates a bit.

“There are needs for more government spending — natural disasters hit China one after another, and we just hosted the Olympics. And it might want to set aside some money for a rainy day.”

However, “nobody is speaking on behalf of SOEs and advocating low taxes”.

China has no nationwide social security system, he says. Some provinces don’t even have a province-wide social security net. “That leads to many migrant workers withdrawing from the social security system. Why? For instance, in the pension system, workers pay 8 per cent of their salary and companies match it.”

In seasonal, labour-intensive industries, workers finish their terms and leave the job for good. But their social security benefits can’t go with them. So they have to withdraw from the system, taking back their own contributions, while the company’s contribution stays within the system.

“So there is no upside for workers to join the pension system, and for companies it creates a financial burden,” he said.

“Officials from inland provinces complain that coastal provinces have seen a fast increase of social security funds because they not only siphoned labourers from inland but social security funds as well.”

Cai said that migrant workers’ insurance provisions should be portable and nationwide. When workers retired, they should be able to receive both their own contributions and those from their employers. “China’s development has reached a stage where labour shortages are occurring, and the labor supply-demand equation is changing. That requires a rise in salary and other benefits.”

He backed the new Labour Law that came into effect on January 1, and which has come under attack from some employers, saying wages should rise by some 10 per cent.

“I think we should stick with the new law,” he said. “There are problems with enforcing it, which were not created by the law itself but by a lack of support measures.

“Companies feel overburdened, partly because of the inadequate social security system. This is not the fault of the Labour Law. If a company can’t bear a modest rise, it is not competitive except as a sweatshop. We should let such companies die, if they have to.”

In developing countries, he said, sometimes when laws are made to protect workers the result is higher unemployment. “The unlimited supply of labour in developing countries is to blame.

“India is one good example. Research shows that economic development levels in different parts of India are directly related to their labour policies, and those which have tight labour regulations often lag in economic development.”

The reason that Cai backs the Labour Law is that labour in China is moving from a surplus to a relative balance. “There must be some kind of incentive to spur labour supply and attract workers,” he said.

Expert: Women ‘should work longer’

The retirement age of women should be extended as a solution to Shanghai’s shrinking supply of labor and the rapidly aging population, a demographics expert has said.

Gui Shixun, vice-director of the Shanghai Research Center on Aging, said by 2020 men and women should be allowed to retire at age 60.

Currently, women working for government institutions and companies are required to retire at age 55 and men at 60. Women blue-collar workers must retire at 50 and men at 55.

In recent years, economic experts have increasingly warned that the nation’s abundant supply of low -cost labor, seen as the backbone of China’s phenomenal economic growth, will decrease.

In Shanghai, 20 percent of its population of about 18 million, are now aged over 60, prompting the local government to step up efforts to find a solution.

Gui said Shanghai’s working population, or permanent residents aged between 15 and 59, shrank 52,400 to 9.76 million last year, reportedly the biggest decrease in all provinces and municipalities in China.

“The slow growth of the labor force in Shanghai will become more serious,” Gui told the Oriental Morning Post newspaper.

Shanghai should grant more permanent resident permits and the one-child policy should be relaxed, he said.

The proposal to have both men and women retire at 60, was put forward a few years ago, but met with mixed reactions.

Bao Yunyun, an office worker, said she would like to retire at an earlier age “so she will have time to do something different”.

But an increasing number of women who want to keep their jobs longer regard the current policy, introduced decades ago, as discrimination.

“The early retiring age means fewer social welfare benefits and it’s unfair for women,” Zhu Dan, a member of the Chongqing Municipal Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Congress, said in a recent Xinhua report.

To receive the full benefits of government policies usually requires employees to have more than 30 years’ service, she said.

Women today are able to work longer than before due to improved working conditions and better health, she said.

Job training for 100,000 students

Twelve vocational high schools will be built in the Pearl River Delta over the next few years to train up to 100,000 students from less-developed areas of Guangdong to meet the soaring demand for skilled workers in the region, a local education official said yesterday.

A Nanfang Daily report quoted Luo Weiqi, director of the provincial education department, as saying: “The development of vocational education will be a priority over the next few years.

“A dozen vocational schools, each with 5,000 to 10,000 students, will be set up, and secondary schools in better developed areas of the Pearl River Delta region will be encouraged to work with their counterparts in less developed regions.”

The delta region has long faced a shortage of labor, and skilled workers are now in particularly high demand as the region seeks to switch focus from labor-intensive manufacturing to value-added industries.

In contrast, there is a surplus of unskilled workers in the northern, eastern and western regions of Guangdong.

Sending students from poorer regions to train in the Pearl River Delta is, therefore, a win-win situation, Luo said.

Lai Hongying, a publicity official with the education department, said that by 2011, the province aims to train 2 million students a year, up from 1.3 million last year.

Under the same timeframe, it also aims to recruit 600,000 new students a year, up from 540,000 last year, he said.

Polytechnics and universities will also seek to attract more students in the areas of science and technology to provide a richer human resource for the development of a modern industrial system, he said.

In a bid to achieve our goals, we will improve working and living conditions for teachers in rural areas, and go “all out” to attract top academics from home and abroad, Lai said.

More workers get legal aid

More workers engaged in disputes with their employers will get access to legal aid as a result of new guidelines issued by China’s top trade union body.

According to the document, which was released on Monday by the All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU), unions at county level or above will set up legal aid agencies to help workers resolve labor disputes with their employers.

The agencies will also help them safeguard personal and property rights related with the disputes.
Workers can apply for legal aid from the agencies even if they are not union members, Xie Liangmin, deputy director of the federation’s law department, said.

However, they should be in “financial difficulties” in order to qualify for free legal aid.

At present, each province has different criteria to judge workers’ financial situation. In some areas, people covered by minimum social security can qualify for legal aid.

The document also stipulates that workers who do not meet the criteria can still apply for legal aid if their rights are “seriously” violated.

Rural migrant workers who have problems in getting payments or compensation for occupational injuries from their bosses are qualified to receive free legal aid regardless of their financial situation.

“Many workers don’t have adequate knowledge of laws and are often discouraged by lengthy legal procedures,” Xie said.

“Legal aid agencies will do their best to help the workers use legal weapons to safeguard their rights and interests.”

According to statistics provided by the ACFTU, trade unions in China had established 6,178 legal aid agencies by the end of last year, in which they accepted 46,000 cases involving lawsuits and helped to solve 29,000 of them.

“Trade unions started to offer legal aid in 1992,” he said.

“The new document will guarantee the status and funding of legal aid agencies.”

Chu Junhua, a lawyer with the Beijing Workers’ Aid Center, said the number of workers applying for legal aid has increased sharply in recent years.

Migrant workers facing job losses in Shenzhen

Millions of unskilled migrant workers could be forced to leave this southern boomtown in the face of its continuing industrial restructuring, a local statistician has said.

The lacking skills and general know-how of migrant farmers-turned-workers could make companies unwilling to employ them, Kong Ailing, chief of Shenzhen statistics team of National Bureau of Statistics, said.

Barely half of the more than 8 million of Shenzhen’s total 12 million population who come from other areas only finished junior middle school education, and the working background of 56 percent was in the electronics, machinery, furniture, garment, toy, catering and services sectors, according to a recent survey by the statistics team.

Only one percent of this sizable social group in the booming city, the forerunner of the country’s reform and opening-up, were actually skilled workers, the survey concluded.

“Workers’ poor education could be seen as hampering companies’ innovation potential in a city where knowledge and technologies become more and more important,” Kong said.

The municipal government allocate resources toward training its migrant workers and also cooperate with some corporations and the communities to satisfy the demands of high-end industries, she said.

“Migrant workers, if better trained and educated, will promote the city’s economic growth,” senior researcher with Shenzhen Academy of Social Sciences, Yang Lixun, said.

Since setting up its first free training school for migrant workers earlier this year, the local government has set itself the target of training 1 million unskilled workers over the next five years.

China loans more to small businesses to boost employment

SHANGHAI (AFP) — China’s central bank has more than doubled the amount entrepreneurs and small businesses can borrow as part of efforts to boost employment, officials said.

The maximum amount that can be loaned to individuals for business purposes was raised to 50,000 yuan (7,300 dollars) from 20,000 yuan, the People’s Bank of China said in a statement posted on its website late Monday.

The limit on loans to labour-intensive small businesses was doubled to two million yuan from one million yuan, according to the notice distributed to local authorities and banks earlier this month.

“(We) need to enhance the policy support for labour-intensive small enterprises, prompt them to hire more jobless people,” the central bank said.

Some small businesses in China have been forced to shut down after being hit by slowing export growth and the government’s tighter credit conditions aimed at fighting inflation.

The large number of small businesses going bankrupt — many of them focused on labour-intensive products for export like textile and toys — has raised unemployment and concerns about possible social instability.

Beijing has long said the official unemployment rate remains below five percent.

Business as usual in Chengdu

After the May 12 Wenchuan earthquake in Sichuan province, wives would ask their husbands who had to go to Chengdu on business to take biscuits, instant noodles and water because they believed the city must have been battered by the quake and did not have enough food or clean water.

As a matter of fact, about one month after the quake, cinemas, museums, libraries, concert halls, restaurants and bars in Chengdu had reopened and were back to normal.

The average occupancy rate of Chengdu’s star-rated hotels has risen to 60 percent and some have even reached 80 percent, higher than before the quake, said Deng Gongli, chief of the city’s tourism administration.

The city’s real estate, tourism, investment and retail sale sectors have also picked up the pieces.

In June, sales at famous retailers in the city such as Wangfujing Department Store, Ito-Yokado, Suning Appliance and GOME Electrical Appliances Holdings picked up, reaching between 80 and 90 percent of their pre-quake levels.

Twenty-three foreign-funded enterprises have registered in Chengdu after the earthquake, with an investment of nearly US$134 million.

Zhou Mi, deputy chief of the Chengdu committee for the promotion of investment, said: “Chengdu remains the commercial center of southwestern China.”

Ge Honglin, mayor of Chengdu, describes Chengdu as a vital economic hub, an inland city with great potential for economic growth as China promotes the development of its western areas.

Land of abundance

Chengdu is traditionally known as the “land of abundance” thanks to the construction of Dujiangyan, the world’s oldest irrigation project still in operation.

Two millennia ago, the Chengdu plain suffered from incessant flooding of Minjiang, a tributary of the Yangtze River, during the summer, while it was stricken with drought in the winter.

Li Bing, governor of Sichuan at the time, started harnessing the river by launching the Dujiangyan Irrigation Project around 256 BC.

When the project was completed, it fed a grid of canals that irrigated 160,000 hectares of arable land on the Chengdu plain. That area has since increased to 670,000 hectares.

The plain has stayed more or less free of floods and drought for more than 2,000 years, and has earned Sichuan the reputation of being a “land of abundance”. The Chengdu plain has remained one of China’s most important agricultural regions for centuries.

In the absence of a dam, experts have hailed the project as one of the world’s most impressive hydraulic engineering projects.

Together with Mount Qingcheng, the project was listed as a World Cultural Heritage Site in 2000 by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO).

Mount Qingcheng, 16 km from Dujiangyan, which is known as “the most tranquil place under heaven,” is the birthplace of Taoism, China’s only indigenous religion.

Chengdu has been a land of abundance throughout history because of its developed agriculture and lack of conflict. Located in the Sichuan Basin and surrounded by rolling mountains, invading troops found Sichuan inaccessible in ancient times.

The city is famous for pandas, romantic poets, spicy hotpot and, more recently, bars and a relaxed atmosphere.

“It is a mix of Frankfurt, Paris and Chicago,” Mayor Ge said.

Ge, a former vice-president of Shanghai-based Baosteel Group, one of China’s largest State-owned enterprises, says his last job trained him to think like an entrepreneur. In fact, the Shanghai native has on many occasions acted as Chengdu’s main PR man.

He has jumped on opportunities to promote the city to foreign investors, attending the American Chamber of Commerce in China’s annual dinner last year, the only mayor to be present. At the 30th Anniversary of the Canada-China Business Council, he gave a lecture and held several meetings with Canadian businesspeople.

Ready for change

Ge is confident that as the world gets increasingly flat, economically speaking, inland Chinese cities such as Chengdu will play an increasingly important role in China’s economic development. For the past several decades, coastal cities have flourished thanks to convenient transportation. Now, as modern technology and industry play a more important role, inland cities are in a good position to develop.

Ge is trying to prepare Chengdu for this change.

The city’s greatest advantage, he says, is human resources. While factories in many coastal cities suffer a shortage of skilled workers, Ge says Chengdu has made vocational education one of the top priorities of the city’s policymaking.

“I am really concerned about training ‘grey collar’ and ‘blue collar’ workers,” he says.

In addition to stipends from the central government, the local government offers extra subsidies to workers and their children living in the Chengdu suburbs so they can receive technical training. The subsidy will cover all school costs, and in some cases, even family living expenses.

The local government encourages high school students to attend vocational schools if they fail to enter college. In December, the city spent 350 million yuan (US$51 million) to build a vocational school. The school, which will begin recruiting students in September, plans to send over 10,000 technicians per year to Chengdu and beyond.

Chengdu aims to become a base for the information technology, automotive and food processing industries. A vast number of skilled workers will be needed to fill the gap. According to its initial plan, the school will offer training courses and cooperate with enterprises to supply talent to enterprises.

A clean city

Apart from the talent pool, Chengdu is trying to build itself into a place that is suitable to live in.

Ge is proud that nearly all foreign embassies have situated their offices in western China in Chengdu. “They chose it because they feel comfortable living here,” he explains, adding that Chengdu aims to be one of the cleanest cities in China.

According to Ge, almost all the buses and taxies in the city burn gas instead of oil to reduce pollution. By 2009, the city expects to safely burn all the rubbish, instead of using landfills. It has also moved major factories out of the city, and is generating electricity with water, instead of burning coal.

In 2007, the city government spent more than 5 billion yuan to build over 30 sewage water processing facilities. Efforts to improve air quality have also paid off: 311 days last year had good air quality. The egret, a rare bird that had long been unseen in the city due to heavy pollution, has recently returned, according to a CCTV report.

“We want to be the city with the best environment in China, and I think we are well on the way to achieving this,” Ge says.

The city’s GDP reached 332 billion yuan in 2007, up 15.8 percent year-on-year, while the per capita income of urban residents surpassed $4,000. Ge aims to increase the disposable income of urban residents by 8 percent, and rural residents by 10 percent annually.

Ge says strong foundations have already been laid, and that Chengdu’s future looks bright.

“When you have the human resources and a suitable place for people to live, enterprises will come and see whether there is a market here for them,” Ge says.

China end-June urban registered unemployment 4.0 pct

BEIJING (XFN-ASIA) – China’s urban registered unemployment rate was 4.0 pct at the end of June, unchanged from the end of March, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security said.

In a statement published on its website, the ministry said that the number of registered unemployed at the end of June stood at 8.35 mln, up from 8.25 mln at end-March.

The ministry said that 6.4 mln new jobs were created in cities in the first half of 2008, accounting for 64 pct of the full year target, while 2.82 mln laid-off workers found new jobs in the same period, accounting for 56 pct of the year target.

China set a 2008 urban unemployment target of 4.5 pct, with urban job creation projected at 10 mln.

At the end of June, there were about 210.29 mln and 249.07 mln people covered by pension and medical care respectively, the ministry said.

Meanwhile, the unemployment, work injury and paternity insurance fund had 120.1 mln, 130.25 mln and 84.52 mln people respectively covered at the end of June, it added.

RPT-PREVIEW-HK Feb-April jobless rate seen stable at 3.4 pct

HONG KONG, May 16 (Reuters) – Hong Kong’s jobless rate probably stayed at 3.4 percent in February-April as the pace of hiring slowed amid uncertainties over the economy, a Reuters survey shows.

“The economy was still doing well in the first quarter but employers became more cautious about hiring due to the weakening external environment,” said Peng Chen, an economist at JPMorgan.

The unemployment rate has fallen much further than expected, hitting 3.3 percent, a 10-year low, in December-February, as a strong economy has created jobs and a tight labour market. However, the rate crept back up to 3.4 percent in January-March as hiring slowed sharply.

The trade sector is one of the territory’s biggest employers and a possible recession in the United States — Hong Kong’s biggest export market after mainland China — is a particular concern.

As the territory’s exports are expected to slow this year, economists see economic growth falling to 4.6 percent, according to a Reuters poll, from 6.3 percent last year and average annual growth of 7.2 percent over the past four years.

In April, growth in business in the private sector virtually stalled and new orders fell for the first time in more than three years, according to the Hong Kong Purchasing Managers’ Index, prompting companies to add few staff. Wages however continued to increase, although at the slowest pace since September.

Demand for professionals across sectors is still buoyant amid a shortage of suitable qualified people and the retail and tourism sectors continue to hire amid strong consumption, which has been underpinned by wage growth.

The unemployment rate has fallen from a record 8.5 percent four years ago. Economists say the economy is now close to full employment and while the jobless rate should stay below 4 percent this year it is likely to keep fluctuating.

Forecasts for the seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for February-April (percent): Daiwa Research Institute 3.3 ING Financial Mkts 3.3 Bank of East Asia 3.4 DBS Bank 3.4 JPMorgan 3.4 Standard Chartered Bank 3.4 Hang Seng Bank 3.5 UBS 3.5

HSBC plans more staff and growth in China

HSBC Bank does not see its business on the Chinese mainland being affected by the United States subprime credit crisis as it will increase staff numbers by up to 50 percent and has eyes set on expansion.

“There won’t be any lessening of commitment to grow our business here in China,” said Richard Yorke, president and chief executive officer of HSBC Bank (China) Co, yesterday in Shanghai. “We have been here for 143 years, and I expect that we will be here for another 143 years but significantly longer beyond that.”

The bank targets to hire 2,000 to 2,500 new employees this year to add to its current 4,900, he said.

HSBC Group Chairman Stephen Green was on a five-day trip to China last week, and he encouraged Yorke’s team to continue to grow the business quickly, Yorke said.

He also said the bank “will continue to grow very, very strongly in this business,” declining to be more specific.

The bank yesterday announced the launch of its private banking business in Shanghai, Beijing and Guangzhou to woo the growing number of millionaires on the mainland.

The bank targets high net worth clients with assets of more than US$10 million and with investable assets of US$3 million. To open accounts, a minimum deposit of US$1 million is required.

The bank got the go-ahead from the regulator to open the business in Guangzhou on February 4 and for the Beijing and Shanghai operations on March 18.

The bank is “comfortable” with the lending growth amid the current tight monetary policy in China, Yorke said.

HSBC China posted strong growth in 2007 on the country’s booming economy and the opening up of the banking market to overseas players. The bank’s operating income grew 44.2 percent to US$451 million. Its pre-tax profit grew 28.7 percent to US$165 million.

HSBC, Citigroup, Standard Chartered Bank and Bank of East Asia, locally incorporated in April 2007 so as to be able to offer unlimited yuan services to mainland residents.