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Pension reform paves way for social equality

Yizhi

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Pension reform paves way for social equality - Xinhua | English.news.cn

by Xinhua writer Zhu Shaobin

BEIJING, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- China's plan to unify its two-tiered pension system is expected to improve social equality by eliminating a major disparity between public and private employee benefits.

According to the reform measures announced last week by the State Council, the segregated system will be unified, with public institution staff brought under the same pension rules as private sector employees.

Pension reform has been an ongoing process in the world's most populous country over the past two decades, the result of which has been a system that requires both employers and employees to contribute to pension funds, which are distributed to employees after retirement.

The pension benefit amount is based on how much both employers and employees have contributed to the pension account.

The majority of Chinese workers must pay 8 percent of their salaries each month toward their pension benefits, while employers are required to contribute an additional 20 percent of an employee's salary toward pensions.

However, pension reform has stalled at public institutions, which have an estimated workforce of 40 million, including civil servants, teachers, doctors, and science researchers. These public employees have inherited a six-decade-old pension system that does not require staff contributions, even though they enjoy bigger pension payments, which are entirely state-funded.

The two-tiered system has led to public complaints about inequality, with many arguing it is unfair for public employees to enjoy better pensions than private sector staff, even though they do not pay a dime during their working years.

An ongoing survey on the "dual pension system" conducted by Xinhua News Agency on its website shows that pension disparities and inequality were the top concerns among respondents, followed by the system's potential impediments to switching jobs, and its growing burden on government spending.

"The reforms will be conducive to building a social pension system that is fairer and more sustainable," Chinese Vice Premier Ma Kai said.

Ma said the unified system will also boost other reforms at public institutions, such as human resources management. Under the segregated pension system, public institution staff with guaranteed state-paid pensions have been reluctant to switch to jobs "outside the system" for fear of forfeiting benefits.

Analysts said that the new reform measures will make it easier for workers to switch between public and private employers.

"The reform measures will change the old stereotype that public institution staff are of a noble class compared to other workers. They are weakening the traditional view that a job inside the state-backed pension system means life stability," said Su Hainan, vice president of the China Association for Labor Studies.

"By bringing different groups of people under the same social benefit framework, the reforms reflect China's efforts to promote fairness and justice," said Wang Yukai, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Governance.

Wang said that pension system reform has long faced many obstacles, but the latest measures will boost expectations for future reforms.

Given possible opposition from public institution staff, the government pledged that current public employees will be able to retain their state-funded benefits earned prior to the reform, according to the State Council.

Meanwhile, a "career bonus scheme" will be established for staff as a supplementary measure to ensure that their pension benefits will not be severely downgraded following the reforms, according to the State Council.
 
Civil servants to see 60 percent increase in salary

Chinese mainland authorities have rolled out its long-expected plan to increase salaries for civil servants, Hong Kong-based Wen Wei Po reported on Sunday.

The pay raise plan, released by the State Council on Jan 12, covers grass-roots officials to ministerial level officials. The plan actually went into effect on Oct 1, 2014. This month civil servants will get their one-off compensation for salaries from the fourth quarter of last year.

The base salary for ministerial level officials will increase from the current 7,020 yuan ($1,130) to 11,385 yuan, while the salaries for the lowest level officials will jump to 1,320 yuan from 630 yuan, according to the plan.

The plan also said that in the future salaries for civil servants will be adjusted every year or every two years.

The newspaper quoted an expert saying that the first increase in salaries of civil servants seems big, but is still reasonable while taking inflation into consideration.

It is noteworthy that lower level officials are receiving a bigger increase, said the expert.

While increasing the level of base salaries, the plan also puts a freeze on the rise of allowances. Some allowances will be merged with the base salary. The allowances for ministerial level officials will be reduced by 650 yuan, while those for the lowest level officials will be down by 220 yuan.

On Wednesday, the State Council unveiled measures to unify old-age pension systems for enterprise employees and workers in government agencies and public institutions. In the past, corporate employees had to pay for their own pensions, while government staff enjoyed pensions without making any contribution at all.
 
Civil servants to see 60 percent increase in salary

Chinese mainland authorities have rolled out its long-expected plan to increase salaries for civil servants, Hong Kong-based Wen Wei Po reported on Sunday.

The pay raise plan, released by the State Council on Jan 12, covers grass-roots officials to ministerial level officials. The plan actually went into effect on Oct 1, 2014. This month civil servants will get their one-off compensation for salaries from the fourth quarter of last year.

The base salary for ministerial level officials will increase from the current 7,020 yuan ($1,130) to 11,385 yuan, while the salaries for the lowest level officials will jump to 1,320 yuan from 630 yuan, according to the plan.

The plan also said that in the future salaries for civil servants will be adjusted every year or every two years.

The newspaper quoted an expert saying that the first increase in salaries of civil servants seems big, but is still reasonable while taking inflation into consideration.

It is noteworthy that lower level officials are receiving a bigger increase, said the expert.

While increasing the level of base salaries, the plan also puts a freeze on the rise of allowances. Some allowances will be merged with the base salary. The allowances for ministerial level officials will be reduced by 650 yuan, while those for the lowest level officials will be down by 220 yuan.

On Wednesday, the State Council unveiled measures to unify old-age pension systems for enterprise employees and workers in government agencies and public institutions. In the past, corporate employees had to pay for their own pensions, while government staff enjoyed pensions without making any contribution at all.


As one who focuses research in HRM development, I can say that this decision on the Chinese Government's part is proven to increase productivity, effectiveness, increase output in performance. Here's a good read by the Freeman's Foundation for Economic Education -- that explores on this.

Wages, Productivity, and Prices : The Freeman : Foundation for Economic Education

Good Job, China ! :)
 
Pension reform paves way for social equality - Xinhua | English.news.cn

by Xinhua writer Zhu Shaobin

BEIJING, Jan. 18 (Xinhua) -- China's plan to unify its two-tiered pension system is expected to improve social equality by eliminating a major disparity between public and private employee benefits.

According to the reform measures announced last week by the State Council, the segregated system will be unified, with public institution staff brought under the same pension rules as private sector employees.

Pension reform has been an ongoing process in the world's most populous country over the past two decades, the result of which has been a system that requires both employers and employees to contribute to pension funds, which are distributed to employees after retirement.

The pension benefit amount is based on how much both employers and employees have contributed to the pension account.

The majority of Chinese workers must pay 8 percent of their salaries each month toward their pension benefits, while employers are required to contribute an additional 20 percent of an employee's salary toward pensions.

However, pension reform has stalled at public institutions, which have an estimated workforce of 40 million, including civil servants, teachers, doctors, and science researchers. These public employees have inherited a six-decade-old pension system that does not require staff contributions, even though they enjoy bigger pension payments, which are entirely state-funded.

The two-tiered system has led to public complaints about inequality, with many arguing it is unfair for public employees to enjoy better pensions than private sector staff, even though they do not pay a dime during their working years.

An ongoing survey on the "dual pension system" conducted by Xinhua News Agency on its website shows that pension disparities and inequality were the top concerns among respondents, followed by the system's potential impediments to switching jobs, and its growing burden on government spending.

"The reforms will be conducive to building a social pension system that is fairer and more sustainable," Chinese Vice Premier Ma Kai said.

Ma said the unified system will also boost other reforms at public institutions, such as human resources management. Under the segregated pension system, public institution staff with guaranteed state-paid pensions have been reluctant to switch to jobs "outside the system" for fear of forfeiting benefits.

Analysts said that the new reform measures will make it easier for workers to switch between public and private employers.

"The reform measures will change the old stereotype that public institution staff are of a noble class compared to other workers. They are weakening the traditional view that a job inside the state-backed pension system means life stability," said Su Hainan, vice president of the China Association for Labor Studies.

"By bringing different groups of people under the same social benefit framework, the reforms reflect China's efforts to promote fairness and justice," said Wang Yukai, a professor at the Chinese Academy of Governance.

Wang said that pension system reform has long faced many obstacles, but the latest measures will boost expectations for future reforms.

Given possible opposition from public institution staff, the government pledged that current public employees will be able to retain their state-funded benefits earned prior to the reform, according to the State Council.

Meanwhile, a "career bonus scheme" will be established for staff as a supplementary measure to ensure that their pension benefits will not be severely downgraded following the reforms, according to the State Council.

I cannot cease to be amazed by PRC. Given if you perfect further your system, you will beat Singapore for retirement plan.

This is another example of PRC elites taking care of people. USA despite her vast wealth never intend to provide any pension to her citizen.
 
How is this good? All it is doing is reducing public worker coverage. It is not increasing private sector coverage. The staff scientists at universities and national labs need compensatory salary increases. Originally, the only reason to work at a university or national lab was for the freedom and the benefits, never the salary. Now the salary is lower, the benefits worse, and less freedom, so it will be very hard for universities and national labs to hold onto talent.
 
I cannot cease to be amazed by PRC. Given if you perfect further your system, you will beat Singapore for retirement plan.

This is another example of PRC elites taking care of people. USA despite her vast wealth never intend to provide any pension to her citizen.

1. How can you compare a city state (Singapore) with China ? It is like comparing an ant to an elephant.

2. In the United States -- most organizations enroll their workers with a 401k or 403 program. Second, there is something called Social Security (tho you shouldn't depend on that alone for retirement). :)
 
1. How can you compare a city state (Singapore) with China ? It is like comparing an ant to an elephant.

2. In the United States -- most organizations enroll their workers with a 401k or 403 program. Second, there is something called Social Security (tho you shouldn't depend on that alone for retirement). :)

A pension plan should be provisioned by state instead of private hands. It should be a proper pension plan rather than a cheapo forced savings, and we all know will be wipe out by inflation, worse when financial institution collapse, or got haircut when company file chapter 11.
 
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