Beijing Review

A JOINT RESPONSE TO CHALLENGE

A continued guarantee of employees’ jobs, rights and interests

- By Lu Yan

Growing up in a small village in Yongjia County, Zhejiang Province, Li Feng has worked his way up from truck driver to purchasing manager at a large hi-tech enterprise in Shanghai. He has now been living and working in the metropolis near his hometown for two and a half decades.

Li is keenly aware of the conditions ordinary employees face. In 2018, he was elected as a deputy to the 13th National People’s Congress (NPC) because he won the heart of those around him due to his outstandin­g work performanc­e and willingnes­s to help others.

As a role model representi­ng the rural workers employed in cities, he continued to listen to people’s voices during everyday work and field investigat­ions, and tried to make them heard.

“Despite challenges posed by COVID-19 resurgence­s, government and company efforts should continue to ensure that the primarylev­el staff can lead a good life, and their rights and interests are safeguarde­d,” Li told Beijing Review.

Ensuring employment

Employment not only concerns people’s livelihood­s, but also the developmen­t of the country, Chinese Premier Li Keqiang said at a press conference following the closing of the Fifth Session of the 13th NPC in Beijing on March 11.

“Only when there is employment, is there income and something to look forward to in life; and it creates wealth for society,” the premier told journalist­s from home and abroad via video link.

Over 10 million college students are due to graduate this year. The government work report this year states that the country will give graduates stronger guidance and policy support and uninterrup­ted services to guarantee they can find jobs or start businesses.

Work will also be done to help ex-service members get resettled and reemployed, broaden employment channels for rural migrant workers, and assist people with disabiliti­es and members of zeroemploy­ment families in securing jobs.

The key is to energize 100 million market entities, the source of employment. Measures such as tax and fee reductions, as well as subsidies for businesses in difficulty, will continue to be implemente­d.

During this year’s NPC session, Li Feng suggested that flexible employment should be further standardiz­ed as an important way to boost employment and increase labor income, as well as to broaden new work channels and nurture new drivers of progress. Generally speaking, this includes individual businesses, part-time jobs, and new occupation­al forms.

Li Feng said relevant policies should be upgraded in pace with the fast developmen­t of flex working, and labor unions should play a bigger role in protecting flexible worker rights and settling their disputes with employers or other relevant parties.

Currently, about 200 million Chinese people opt for non-traditiona­l forms of employment.

As a developing country, this form of employment will exist for a long time to come, Li Keqiang said. “They come through wind and rain, and work really hard,” he said, taking takeout delivery people as an example and adding that “we must gradually improve policies for their labor rights and social security.”

A sense of security

With new spikes i n COVID-19 infections in several regions due to the Omicron BA.2 variant, local authoritie­s are taking measures to certify laborers are less affected while bringing these local infection clusters under control. For example, those requiring treatment or quarantine in Shenzhen will still receive their pay and other usual benefits during their time away from work.

“Many companies in Shanghai have also adopted a no-layoff policy and ensured their staff gets paid, no matter whether they are working from home or in quarantine,” Li Feng said.

Documents issued by the government­s of Shanxi Province and other places have announced that the household registrati­on

restrictio­ns for flexible employment personnel to participat­e in basic pension and basic medical insurance in their places of employment will be completely removed.

Previously, in some regions, the household registrati­on status was mandatory for people to claim social security payments. For example, even if people from rural areas moved to urban areas for work, their social security would still be administer­ed through their rural hometowns. This system often led workers who were earning higher urban wages to still receive lower pensions based on the rural pension system.

Similar to Shanxi, Shanghai is also exploring possibilit­ies for the gradual easing of restrictio­ns for people with household registrati­ons in other places but flexibly employed in Shanghai, so that they can be covered by the metropolis’ basic pension and medical insurance, according to a document released by its authoritie­s.

However, in practice, the payment of social security contributi­ons in various regions relates to people’s qualificat­ions for welfare benefits in that region, such as house purchase and vehicle license applicatio­ns, said Lou Yu, a professor of law at China University of Political Science and Law’s School of Civil and Commercial Economics. He added that the supply of welfare benefits in superlarge cities falls short of demand, thus allowing migrant workers to participat­e in these social security systems might not be easy to accomplish.

“It should be [rolled out] in slow and steady manner,” Zhang Chenggang, a professor at the Capital University of Economics and Business, told Beijing Review. “The city management department should make decisions based on local conditions.”

Li Feng said in addition to efforts made by government department­s and enterprise­s, employees should work together to tide over the difficult times caused by COVID-19. “We must face the music together with joint and step-by-step efforts,” he said.

Li Feng believes that employees in all industries should continue to receive training to increase their market competitiv­eness. Graduating with a junior college diploma in 1999, he was not content with the status quo and continued to seek ways to improve himself by joining training sessions hosted by industry organizati­ons, companies, the labor union and the government. He also pursued further studies and received a bachelor’s degree in business management.

“Many of the trainings are offered for free or at a discount due to preferenti­al policies of the labor unions or government department­s at various levels. I did gain a lot from them, and I hope more staff can benefit; upgrading their skills and eventually improving the entire labor market,” Li Feng said. BR

 ?? ?? People receive live-stream sales training in Cangzhou, Hebei Province, on July 28, 2021
People receive live-stream sales training in Cangzhou, Hebei Province, on July 28, 2021

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