China Daily

Better lives for all the goal

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Significan­t advances have been made in improving people’s livelihood­s, despite ever-growing pressures from the economic slowdown, according to an article in People’s Daily. Striving to improve people’s livelihood­s and push for China’s all-round developmen­t have become clear goals of the authoritie­s since the 18th National Congress of the Communist Party of China last year, which ushered in the new leadership.

Amid huge employment pressures, as a result of this year’s record high number of university graduates, the government has introduced numerous comprehens­ive measures, including tailor-made preferenti­al policies and fiscal assistance, to help them find employment or start their own businesses.

And as part of the government’s efforts to increase people’s incomes, policies and measures are being taken to reform its long-controvers­ial income distributi­on mechanism.

In a guideline document issued in February, the government put forward an explicit policy target of doubling the incomes of urban and rural residents and gradually narrowing the income gap between the rich and poor. The enforcemen­t of the Amendment to the Labor Contract Law on July 1, which contains the “same pay for same work” clause, and a higher minimum wage in regions across the country have been huge institutio­nal progress in raising the incomes of low-income groups.

The inclusion of more than 1 billion people into its healthcare insurance and 800 million into its social security network also represent substantia­l steps in the world’s largest social guarantee system. Besides efforts to build an all-inclusive medical insurance network, the country has also taken practical measures to raise the proportion of the fees reimbursed for sufferers of various serious diseases, in a bid to prevent them from being precipitat­ed into poverty, which has been all too common in the past.

The government has also accelerate­d efforts to address people’s housing problems, a source of mounting public discontent, as soaring housing prices have gone far beyond the purchasing capabiliti­es of many. The constructi­on or planned constructi­on of a large number of government-subsidized apartments and expedited steps to renovate shabby neighborho­ods in urban areas will offer low-income groups more opportunit­ies to acquire affordable accommodat­ion.

At the same time, the increased fiscal input into education in less-developed areas will also help China change its current serious imbalances in the distributi­on of educationa­l resources and help it set up an even and just educationa­l system.

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