The chiefs of six central state-owned enterprises (SOEs) may
lose their jobs as a result of poor management after an annual
examination of the performance of central SOEs.
According to a statement from the State-owned Assets Supervision
and Administration Commission (SASAC) yesterday, four central SOEs
received D grades and two received E grades in the 2005
examination.
According to an earlier regulation on performance assessment, in
addition to a cut in salary and bonuses, the chiefs of such
enterprises may face dismissal or a change of job. However, none of
the firms were identified.
The performance evaluation system, introduced by the SASAC in
2004, check annual profits, returns on equity and other major
financial figures that reflect the performance of the central SOEs
and then grades the enterprises on a scale from A to E.
The 2005 examination, in which 166 central SOEs participated,
saw only 28 enterprises receive A grades and 84 receive Bs. Apart
from their basic salary and a performance bonus worth 1.5 to 3
times their salary, their leaders will receive additional medium-
and long-term incentives.
Those running enterprises graded D and E could lose their jobs
after their bonus is reduced, based on the condition of the
enterprise.
Four enterprises were downgraded because of safety or
environmental pollution accidents, including China National
Petroleum Corp and Sinohydro Corp. Six others, including China
Guodian Corp and China Datang Corp, were downgraded as a result of
irregular financial practices or negligence in supervision.
(China Daily August 23, 2006)