China Daily (Hong Kong)

Benefits are sought for skilled workers

Companies encouraged to reward ability, diligence and high output

- By JIANG CHENGLONG jiangcheng­long@ chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese State-owned enterprise­s should play a leading role in improving the treatment of skilled workers, especially highly skilled talent, a senior official said on Monday.

On Thursday, the general offices of the Communist Party of China Central Committee and State Council jointly released a guideline calling for more incentives for skilled workers by raising their political status, incomes and social benefits.

China has a working population of 776 million, of which only 165 million are skilled, and a mere 47 million are “highly skilled”, according to Tang Tao, deputy minister of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security.

“That is a truly serious imbalance between demand and supply in the labor market,” he said on Monday.

The ministry attributed the shortage in the talent supply mainly to low income, unsatisfac­tory welfare benefits and poor social status associated with skilled positions.

“The State-owned enterprise­s, especially those directly under the central government, should take the lead in improving the treatment of technical workers,” Tang said.

“We are now talking with the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission about that. In addition, we are communicat­ing with the All-China Federation of Industry and Commerce, hoping that nonState-owned enterprise­s can increase skilled workers’ benefits.”

According to the guideline, State-owned enterprise­s’ gross payrolls should lean toward highly skilled workers, and average salary increases shouldn’t be lower than those for administra­tive staff.

According to Xinhua News Agency, in some job fairs in Guangdong and Fujian provinces, salaries as high as 20,000 yuan ($3,200) a month are on offer, but qualified technician­s are simply not available.

As for increasing all skilled workers’ benefits, the guideline encouraged companies to establish salary systems that can reflect job value, personal ability and work performanc­e. It also advised employers to subsidize complement­ary allowances for technician­s.

It called for companies to guarantee that workers with higher skills, greater diligence and greater output receive better rewards.

“Front-line skilled workers are fresh troops for the Made in China 2025 strategy,” Tang said. “They can make highqualit­y products and provide good related services.”

The national strategy is characteri­zed by a switch from low-end manufactur­ing to more value-added production, with a focus on emerging industries. That calls for more highly skilled industrial workers.

Yan Jinghua, vice-president of All-China Federation of Trade Unions, thought wellqualif­ied and adequate skilled workers had a positive effect on technical innovation.

“There were a total of 607,000 national patents obtained by workers around China from 2013 to 2017. And 15 technologi­cal achievemen­ts of front-line technician­s have won the National Science and Technology Progress Awards in recent years,” he said.

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