The central government has sent a team of more than 100 to probe
into misappropriation from the social security fund in Shanghai.
The director of the city's labor and social security bureau has
been dismissed as deputy to the National People's Congress.
Although the billions of yuan involved make this the biggest
case of its kind in terms of money, it is still only one of many
similar ones that have been uncovered in recent years.
The social security fund is compared to a purse containing money
for the basic livelihood of retired residents. Who holds the string
to that purse and how it can be loosened and tightened to keep what
is within from depreciation is of great significance to the future
life of millions of aged citizens.
Statistics reveal that more than 10 billion yuan (US$125
million) nationwide had been misappropriated from these special
funds from 1986 to 1997, and relevant departments had received
nearly 100 tips about misuse of such money from 2000 to 2005.
The State Council has repeatedly issued documents requiring
special care of this fund and specifically reiterating how part of
this money could be used to appreciate its value. A special bureau
was established under the Ministry of Labor and Social Security in
1998 to supervise the management and use of this fund.
Yet the misappropriation of money from this purse still happens
all the time. It seems that the current supervision mechanism
cannot scratch in the right place. The supervision bureau can
regularly send teams down to check the accounts of those
grass-roots departments holding the purse string. But what if those
offenders collaborate with bankers to rig the accounts?
The biggest case in Shanghai and many others have exposed some
loopholes: Top leaders of social security fund management
departments have absolute say over the use of those funds, and can
lend the money to anyone they want; those who are directly in
charge of the accounts can even use the money to buy stock shares
themselves.
Another big problem is that these departments are under the
auspices of local governments, which would sometimes employ
administrative means to appropriate some money from this fund for
purposes it should never be used according to the relevant rules.
In these circumstances, those directly managing the fund would find
it almost impossible to resist the decisions of their local
government.
Although the Ministry of Labor and Social Security and the
Ministry of Supervision will jointly organize special teams to
conduct regular examinations of the collection, management and use
of this fund, reform of the mechanism is indeed necessary to
facilitate cross-supervision within the managing department so that
no one, including top leaders, will have absolute power to use the
money. Severe punishment must be meted out for those government
officials who use their power to misappropriate money from this
fund.
(China Daily August 29, 2006)