A series of policies are needed to properly handle the problems
concerning nearly 200 million farmer-turned workers in the coming
five years, a senior official from the Ministry of Construction
said on Tuesday.
This coincides with the remarks by Wang Guangtao, minister of
construction, last week. Wang said there would be a gradually doing
away with discriminative regulations and restrictions that prohibit
rural migrant workers from enjoying the same treatment and
privileges in finding jobs and settling down in cities as urban
residents.
The move to transfer surplus laborers from underdeveloped areas
to developed regions has been confirmed to be an effective approach
to narrow the disparity between these areas.
A research conducted by Fan Gang, director of the National
Economics Research Institute under the China Reform Foundation, has
found that rural migrant workers typically send half of the money
they earn in cities back to their rural hometowns.
This has considerably raised the average income of rural
residents in underdeveloped areas and contributed to the efforts to
narrow the income gap between rural and urban residents.
Yet, there is potential danger that discriminative rules against
these farmer-turned workers have segregated them from their urban
counterparts.
They have to rent houses in poorer areas and pay extra fees to
send their children to urban schools. Without access to urban
social security and healthcare system, they are often reduced to
the bottom of the social strata.
If this situation continues, a dualistic social structure may
take shape in urban areas, in which rural migrant workers and their
families will become a disadvantaged group and their later
generations will have hardly any chances to climb up the social
ladder.
This tendency goes against the goal of building a harmonious
society and therefore must be changed.
Minister of Construction Wang said that the economic strength in
urban areas is now strong enough to assimilate farmer-turned
workers as equals of their urban counterparts into cities.
But much concrete work needs to be done to materialize this
goal. The abolition of discriminative regulations against them is,
of course, necessary, but far from enough.
Efforts from the government are required for the farmer-turned
workers in cities, helping them enjoy the same opportunities and
gradually admitting them into urban social security and healthcare
system.
A document released by the Ministry of Health on Tuesday
requiring hospitals to provide rural migrant workers with a
reasonable and simple procedure of seeing doctors is as a move in
the right direction.
(China Daily May 18, 2006)