The Ministry of Labor and Social Security is working on a draft
regulation to encourage employers to implement salary rises, a move
that is being seen as a way to lessen the effects of rising
inflation.
The regulation is designed to help develop a mechanism to
facilitate a healthy and rational increase of employees' salaries,
an official said.
The draft will be submitted to the State Council for review soon
but the source did not release specific details.
Qiu Xiaoping, a senior official with the ministry, said the
consumer price index shall be taken into account when salary levels
are set.
"The government can not force companies to increase salaries. We
hope to find a decision-making system that involves all parties in
this issue through the regulation," he was quoted by Beijing-based
financial weekly China Times.
About 12 provinces in China have announced their own rules on
the salary issue and labor departments in 27 provinces began to ask
employers to deposit a certain amount of security to ensure they do
not delay payment.
These efforts have effectively reduced the number of cases in
which salaries have been paid in arrears, the ministry said.
But many employers have not increased salaries for years and
employees, especially blue-collars, still earn less than they
should, Qiu said.
China, whose economy is driven by low-cost labor, has made
efforts to protect the rights of employees. A new labor contract
law took effect on Jan. 1, imposing tighter controls over
employers' rights to hire and fire staff.
(Xinhua News Agency January 23, 2008)