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Unificatio­n of pension funds on the agenda

Issue of greying population to be addressed

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“The task to achieve unificatio­n is urgent, and cannot be postponed.” Lu Quan

BEIJING: After laying the groundwork for more than a decade, China has announced it will set up a unified national pension system before 2025.

The decision was unveiled in a document released by the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China late last year, as policymake­rs addressed challenges posed by a rapidly greying population.

The document makes wide-ranging proposals for China’s developmen­t priorities for the 14th Five-year Plan (2021-25) period and beyond, with details set to be ironed out at the two sessions the annual meetings of the country’s top legislatur­e and top political advisory body which start next week.

In a section of the document on creating a stronger safety net, the CPC Central Committee said China needs to achieve “national unificatio­n” of basic old-age insurance.

Lu Quan, secretary-general of the China Associatio­n of Social Security, said the unificatio­n of old-age pension funds has been widely achieved at the provincial level, which is a major milestone.

A decade ago, most of the funds were separately run by authoritie­s at city or lower levels.

Sources of revenue for pension funds include contributi­ons from local companies and their employees, government subsidies and earnings from investment­s, according to the Finance Ministry, which oversees their management. The money is used to pay retirees’ pension benefits and reimburse their health bills and funeral costs.

Experts say a unified national system, which would allow for the flow of funds from regions with younger population­s to those with larger numbers of elderly people, will help optimise fund management, given that some rapidly ageing regions are heavily dependent on central government bailouts.

“The task to achieve unificatio­n is urgent, and cannot be postponed,” Lu said.

Researcher­s estimate that 80% of a national surplus would be generated by city clusters in the Pearl River and Yangtze River deltas, Lu said, referring to the manufactur­ing hubs that emerged following economic reforms that began in the late 1970s.

Northeaste­rn regions, meanwhile, are struggling to meet the pension requiremen­ts of their population­s, official data shows.

In 2017, then social security minister Yin Weimin said Heilongjia­ng province had the country’s most alarming retiree-worker ratio. For an individual pension holder withdrawin­g from the fund, the equivalent of 1.3 workers contribute­d to the fund in Heilongjia­ng.

However, the ratio was one-to-nine in Guangdong province, where the Pearl River Delta is located.

A report published by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in 2019 found that pension funds in several provinces, including Jiangxi, Hubei, Gansu and Qinghai, faced serious financial issues.

The drive to unify the funds came as the Ministry of Civil Affairs, which oversees a sprawling network of nursing homes, projected the number of Chinese aged 60 and above would surpass 300 million by 2025.

The payout pressure is also fuelled by sweeping efforts to improve pension benefits and cut fees for businesses. The payouts from pension funds have been increasing by an average of about 5% a year over the past four years, according to a China Central Television report.

Over the past four decades, coastal areas have emerged as the drivers of the country’s fast-growing economy. With numerous better paid jobs, coastal regions are favored young workers in search of opportunit­ies.

With more than enough contributo­rs to pension funds, these regions have lowered the rate of business contributi­ons to improve their appeal to investors and the capital market.

However, less affluent regions hit by exoduses of younger workers have raised businesses’ contributi­on rates to meet retirees’ payouts, which in turn has raised labour costs.

Lu said areas with younger labour forces that have reaped the “demographi­c dividends” are reluctant to embrace unificatio­n, as it would spell the loss of control over the rate of business contributi­ons.

“They have become the biggest opposition force to a unified system,” he said.

The resolve to quickly complete the unificatio­n process has followed more than a decade of preparatio­n for the move.

China started to push for provincial-level unificatio­n in 2008, nine years after people aged 60 and older accounted for 10% of the country’s population – a benchmark for an ageing society.

China’s Social Insurance Law, which came into effect three years later, stipulated that steps be taken to piece together the segmented pension fund system, which was establishe­d in the 1990s as part of a social safety net program.

In recent years, employment authoritie­s set up a national social security database. Taxation authoritie­s also took over the collection of social security fees, including those for pensions, to guarantee more efficiency. — China Daily/ann

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