Institutional construction is important to prevent new wage
defaults, commented an article in Workers' Daily.
Fujian Province recently implemented a series
of measures to enhance the construction of an enterprise credit
system. These measures including initiating a key supervision
mechanism, a wage guarantee fund system, a responsibility system
and a strict market accession system will help build a long-term
mechanism to prevent defaulting on migrant workers' payments.
This is a significant trial move to solve an ongoing
problem.
All levels of government have been working on this issue and
have achieved some results in recent years. But some measures are
implemented inconsistently or only have limited effect.
Fujian Province has mobilized all concerned departments in a
joint effort. For example, the labor department will coerce
enterprises with a record of defaulting to deposit guarantee funds
and publicly shame enterprises that have large arrears. As to those
enterprises that deliberately default on payments time and again,
the department of industries and trades will revoke their
qualifications or cancel their licenses. All this shows the
provincial government's determination to solve the problem.
At the end of 2003, the State Council made a plan that the issue
of migrant workers' defaulted wages should be solved by 2006. This
commitment should be fulfilled. Even after wage arrears have been
settled, new defaults should be prevented. If the institutional
loopholes cannot be mended, new defaults will occur while the old
ones are being paid. In this instance, migrant workers' rights and
interests still cannot be guaranteed and the regular market order
cannot be kept. Thus it is profoundly important to establish a
long-term mechanism.
Institutional construction is an important issue. When there are
disputes that cannot be solved according to existing laws and
regulations, we amend legislation. When crises like SARS and Bird
Flu strike, we make emergency plans. Actually appendices and
emergency plans are just remedial measures taken after we have
already paid a dear price. We need to learn from these lessons and
enhance the overall institutional structure.
For example, if the government cannot increase the input to the
public health service, then the hospitals' zeal for profits cannot
be rooted out and citizens will still find it difficult to afford
medical treatments. If the educational department cannot solve the
issue of imbalanced educational resources then parents and
students' determination to select schools cannot be diminished. If
illegal small mines cannot be closed, the regularity of accidents
cannot be slowed.
Compared with taking remedial measures, it is difficult to take
preventative institutional construction. Preventative work may not
bring immediately visible benefits and needs great efforts to be
taken. In a word, institutional construction tests the ability and
wisdom of the government.
(China Daily August 7, 2006)