China maintains stable employment
By
Li Xinping from People’s Daily
China
got off to a good start in employment in the first quarter of 2019, with core
employment indicators behaving well.
The
country added 3.24 million urban jobs in the first quarter and accomplished 29
percent of this year’s target, laying a solid foundation for the completion of
the annual target.
At
the end of the first quarter, China’s registered urban unemployment rate was
3.67 percent, at a historical low. In March, the country’s surveyed urban
unemployment rate was 5.2 percent, a decrease of 0.1 percentage point from the
previous month and below the expected target of 5.5 percent.
In
March, the overall employment was stable and unemployment rate was reduced as
companies started operations after the Spring Festival holiday and job seekers were
employed, said Meng Canwen, deputy chief of the population and employment
statistics department of the National Bureau of Statistics.
From
January to March, 1.17 million laid-off workers were reemployed and 390,000
people with employment difficulties found jobs in urban areas, both exceeding
the target numbers.
At
the end of March, the total number of rural workers employed away from their
homes reached 177 million, an increase of 2.1 million year on year, and over 90
percent of them returned to their posts.
The
unemployment rate for the main working-age population aged 25-59 in each month
in the first quarter was less than 5 percent.
A
steady performance of the macro economy ensures stable employment. China’s
service sector, the main channel for creating jobs, gains great momentum. In
the first three months, the proportion of added value of the service sector in
GDP grew to 57.3 percent, an increase of 0.6 percentage points year on year.
Data
shows that per one million yuan of added value in the tertiary industry creates
jobs for 8.1 people, 1.6 people higher than the secondary industry, Meng said,
adding that China’s job-creation capacity has been enhanced.
Robust
growth continues in emerging industries, a new force of employment creation. In
recent years, new job including drone pilot, digital manager and industrial
robot operator have emerged as a result of the booming emerging industries.
Li
Geng was immediately hired by a company after obtaining a drone pilot training
certificate in this February, and devoted himself to busy spring plowing in
March.
“I
had to work for 4 households a day, and didn’t have a day off during the spring
plowing season,” Li said, adding that spraying drones have become more popular
and even green hands like him had to operate the vehicles all by himself.
The
central and western regions with large population witness booming economic
development.
Zhang
Dongmei from Yunxi county, Shiyan, central China’s Hubei province chose to work
near her home at a poverty alleviation workshop established in her village.
“I
make embroidery work with an annual income of 30,000 yuan, and I can take care
of my parents and children,” said Zhang.
Full
implementation of an employment-first policy guarantees stable employment.
Since the second half of last year, China put stable employment first while
ensuring a stable financial sector, stable foreign trade, stable foreign
investment, stable domestic investment, and stable expectations. A series of
measures and policies to ensure stable employment and boost employment had been
successively introduced.
This
year, for the first time, the country elevated the employment-first policy to
the status of a macro policy. These favorable policies have fostered an
enabling environment for employment.
Dai
Ling works for a textile factory in Changsha, central China’s Hunan province.
At night, she attends a simple programming training organized by the local
government.
“I
didn’t expect that I can receive an allowance of more than 1,000 yuan while
receiving on-the-job training,” Dai said, adding that, “an intelligent
production line has been put into operation in our factory. As long as I can
program, I may become a system operator and my salary will be doubled”.
China
has intensified efforts to supporting enterprises in stabilizing employment. In
the first quarter, it allocated a total of 1.17 billion yuan to 21,000 enterprises
to stabilize employment, which benefited 2.83 million workers. The country also
granted 420 million yuan to 260,000 employees to upgrade their skills.
China
will continue to deepen implementation of the employment-first policy, give
greater priority to increasing employment, and implement each and every policy,
said Lu Aihong, spokesperson of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social
Security, adding that the country has the confidence to achieve fuller
employment and create better quality jobs.
Photo
taken on April 30, 2019 shows a drone sprays pesticides in a field in Guanyun county,
east China’s Jiangsu province. (Photo by Wu Chenguang from People’s Daily
Online)
China maintains stable employment
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