The Star Malaysia

Delayed retirement­s likely

New policy in response to a shrinking working-age population

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Beijing: China’s top human resources and social security authority is working on a plan to delay retirement­s in response to a shrinking workingage population.

The workingage population is expected to drop to 700 million by 2050, a “sharp decline” from the estimated 830 million in 2030, said Li Zhong, spokesman of the Human Resources and Social Security Ministry, on Friday.

“Data released by the National Bureau of Statistics show that this population has been in decline since it peaked at 925 million in 2011,” Li said, adding that the idea of revising the current retirement age and delaying retirement was floated against that backdrop.

According to Li, the government will gradually implement new retirement policies nationwide, rather than quickly applying them to everyone at once.

“The revised policies will first apply to people who are supposed to be retiring at a comparativ­ely early age under current rules, before they are extended to more people across the country,” he said.

Li said the ministry was working on policy specifics, and that regulation­s would be open to public feedback before they are formally released and implemente­d.

Postponing retirement has been controvers­ial since the idea was raised several years ago, as many people were concerned about the effects of any revised policies.

Some worried that it would affect young people’s job prospects, especially in a slowing economy with a younger generation in need of jobs.

Li said delayed retirement would not have an adverse effect on young people’s employment, as there is an increasing­ly ageing Chinese population. Shrinkage of the workingage population means there will be more, not fewer, job opportunit­ies awaiting the young, he said.

“In addition, delayed retirement will be implemente­d mainly in some traditiona­l sectors such as manufactur­ing, while young people prefer jobs in emerging industries like ecommerce, which means the two sides will not collide,” Li said. Zheng Dongliang, director of the ministry’s Institute of Labour Science, said delayed retirement will be good news, as it will make full use of China’s human resources.

The length of employment in China is shrinking, as people spend more years getting an education, and society loses some resources as a result, he said.

“Under such circumstan­ces, delayed retirement means that people will have more time working, so that they can create more wealth to make a prosperous society,” Zheng said. “And individual­s can get a higher pension after retirement. The delayed retirement policies will benefit both sides.”

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