There is both bad news and good news for China's employment
situation. The bad news is that the country is expected to face a
job shortfall of more than 14 million this year, which implies the
unemployment rate may hit a record high.
The good news is that the booming private sector, estimated to
create up to 70 percent of new job opportunities in China, can play
a crucial role in easing the country's unemployment pressure.
This week job fairs will be held in 100 cities nationwide to
help private enterprises find workers.
The campaign, launched by the All-China Federation of Industry
and Commerce and the Ministry of Labor and Social Security, is part
of efforts to address the unemployment problem.
Hu Deping, vice-chairman of the federation, said China's private
sector has become a major employment channel, with over 4 million
private and self-employed firms employing more than 200 million
people.
A similar program organized last year offered a total of 1.43
million job vacancies and helped 575,000 people successfully land
jobs. Higher hope is pinned on this year's event.
The vice-chairman also noted that private enterprises will enjoy
tax cuts, government subsidies for worker training and secured
credit in return for creating jobs.
These incentives are undoubtedly encouraging and conducive to
lowering the unemployment rate, but much has to be done to help
boost the development of the entire private sector and then to
generate more job opportunities.
One badly needed move is to open up more sectors currently
monopolized by State-owned enterprises (SOEs) such as power,
telecommunications and rail to the private sector to stimulate its
growth.
Meanwhile, local governments should be urged to abandon their
discriminatory policies and regulations against private enterprises
and allow them to enjoy the same national treatment as SOEs and
foreign-funded firms.
Equally, employees need to make changes to their traditional
ideas of job-hunting so that they can fully tap into the huge
potential of the private sector.
Chinese, especially university graduates, have always shown a
clear bias against private firms in seeking employment due to the
long-held belief that jobs with private enterprises are usually
unstable and poorly paid.
The bias has already resulted in a rush by millions of
job-seekers to government bodies and SOEs, whereas job
opportunities in the private sector are neglected. This is what
labor experts refer to as the strange co-existence of "lack of jobs
(in the state sector)" and "lack of job seekers (in the private
sector)."
The earlier the private sector is given fair treatment by both
governments and job seekers, the sooner the country's unemployment
problem will improve.
(China Daily April 12, 2006)