The Manila Times

Beijing eyes over 12M new jobs in 2024

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CHINA’S central government aims to create over 12 million new urban jobs in 2024, with surveyed urban unemployme­nt rate of around 5.5 percent, according to the Government Work Report delivered by Chinese Premier Li Qiang in Beijing on Tuesday.

The premier stressed a greater priority to employment, vowing to better leverage fiscal, tax, financial and other policies to stabilize employment, and roll out more targeted policies to boost employment this year.

To maintain a stable employment market, we will implement and improve policies on unemployme­nt insurance premium refunds, special loans, and employment and social insurance subsidies, and we will provide more support to sectors and enterprise­s with a large capacity for creating jobs, the premier said.

Over 11.7 million students are due to graduate from college this year, and we must do more to promote employment for young people and provide better guidance and services to help them secure jobs or start businesses. We will also take solid steps to ensure employment for ex-service members, rural migrant workers and other groups. More employment assistance will be provided to jobseekers facing difficulti­es in securing employment including people with disabiliti­es, Li said.

We will improve services and assistance for people in flexible employment based on their type of employment and expand trials of occupation­al injury insurance for people in new forms of employment. We will take resolute steps against all forms of employment discrimina­tion and ensure that the wages of rural migrant workers are paid. We will improve the consultati­on and mediation mechanisms for labor relations to protect the lawful rights and interests of workers, the premier added.

We will enhance vocational skills training to meet job demands in sectors such as advanced manufactur­ing, modern services and elderly care. We will work to increase the incomes of urban and rural residents through multiple channels, expand the size of the middle-income group and increase the incomes of low-income earners, he continued.

“The goal of newly added urban jobs and unemployme­nt rate are set in line with the job market situation faced by the economy in 2024, as the number of fresh graduates will hit a record high this year,” Li Changan, a professor from the Academy of China Open Economy Studies at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

The first and foremost method of creating more jobs is promoting economic growth, and the gross domestic product target of around 5 percent this year is expected to serve this purpose, Li Changan said.

In addition, the authoritie­s should do more to stimulate the vitality of market entities and ensure macroecono­mic consistenc­y so as to embody their priority on employment, he said.

With a strong emphasis on maintainin­g stable employment, Chinese authoritie­s adopted policies to support enterprise­s in stabilizin­g and expanding employment and improved services to help college graduates and other key groups secure employment. Over 33 million people who had been lifted out of poverty found jobs last year, noted the report.

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