The government should make more efforts to promote employment,
says a signed article in People's Daily. An excerpt
follows:
More than 5.4 million new jobs have been created in urban areas
in the first six months of 2006, which account for 60 percent of
the target set for the year. This roughly equals the situation last
year. But such an increase in employment is not quite satisfactory
compared with the country's GDP growth, which is estimated to be 10
percent in 2006. Why doesn't rapid economic growth bring about
higher employment?
Increased employment mainly depends on economic growth. Frankly
speaking, though the current employment situation is not that
optimistic, it is already quite an achievement. GDP growth reached
9.5 percent in 2004, which signaled the nation was entering a new
round of rapid growth. Before that, the employment situation was
bad, with the registered jobless rate increasing by 0.1 percentage
point for several consecutive quarters. The employment rate has
stabilized since then. In other words, the employment situation
could have been worse if the economy had not grown at such a
rate.
But it is also a fact that employment elasticity is a bit low.
Employment elasticity indicates an increase in employment in
response to economic growth. In the 1980s, every 1 percentage point
of GDP growth created more than 2 million new jobs, with this
number falling to 800,000 in the 1990s. Employment elasticity will
decrease in the long term, but it is adjustable. The change mainly
depends on factors such as the economic structure and labor
costs.
Employment elasticity will be high if the proportions of small
and medium-sized enterprises and labor-intensive industries are
large. China has restructured its economy in recent years.
Technology and capital, instead of labor, are playing bigger roles
in new industries. The decline of employment elasticity is
therefore unavoidable.
The state has taken many measures in this regard, such as
drawing up proactive employment policies, supporting the
re-employment of laid-off workers, and promoting the migration of
rural surplus labor. But the situation remains grave. More
attention should therefore be paid to optimizing the structures of
industries to strengthen employment elasticity.
(China Daily July 20, 2006)