More action should be taken to cut excessive "monopoly welfare,"
says a commentary in Workers' Daily. An excerpt
follows:
According to the newly approved resource conservation regulation
of Anhui Province, resource enterprises and their
employees can no longer enjoy a "free lunch" of resource
products.
The regulation rules that resource enterprises should not
provide free or discounted resource products to their employees. It
also forbids the collection of a fixed monthly charge on the use of
resource products.
Employees of the power industry can use electricity for free,
staff of gas companies can buy cheap gas, public transport
employees can take the bus without paying it is a common phenomenon
in China's monopoly industries that employees can enjoy free or
discounted products.
The public is critical of such "monopoly welfare." It also
became a target for criticism during this year's sessions of the
National People's Congress and the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference. Thus Anhui Province's legal action against
such practices is worthy of applause.
Because of their special status, monopoly industries collect
fees from the public through non-market means and turn part of this
money into welfare for their own employees. Such welfare does not
come from profit gained through market competition, but from the
administrative monopoly.
Recently some monopoly industries asked to increase the prices
of their resource products because they had suffered a huge loss.
Yet the reasons they cited for the loss were all external ones.
They deliberately ignored the internal factor of unduly high
welfare. It is impractical to expect monopoly industries to rectify
or ban monopoly welfare under their own steam. Thus legal action to
end such monopoly welfare should be embraced.
It will contribute to changing the phenomenon of some members of
society invading the welfare of others, urging monopoly industries
to reduce costs and put off their impulse to raise the prices of
their products.
But this is still a provincial regulation. Monopoly enterprises
in other regions will not stop their practice of "monopoly
welfare." Thus more efforts should be made. And institutional
reform on administrative monopoly should be carried out to fully
solve the problem.
(China Daily April 28, 2006)