China’s labor regulations harm workers by reducing job opportunities, the finance minister said yesterday as Beijing tries to restructure its economy while avoiding mass layoffs and social unrest.
The labor contract law passed in 2007 restricts companies’ ability to fire workers.
Chinese Minister of Finance Lou Jiwei (樓繼偉) said it was discriminatory toward people entering the workforce, and so ultimately counterproductive.
Photo: AP
His comments on the sidelines of the National People’s Congress (NPC) echo debates around the world on the conflict between job creation and the protection of existing employees.
China was once a command economy where many workers could rely on their work unit, or danwei, for everything from housing to medical care. Three decades ago, it embraced market principles — dubbed “socialism with Chinese characteristics” — triggering a huge economic boom. However, some sectors remain bloated and inefficient, particularly state-owned enterprises.
Lou said the labor law’s “original purpose was to protect workers, but in the end, it harms the interests of some workers, and may lead to a rapid rise in wages,” increasing firms’ costs and leading them to move operations overseas.
“Ultimately who is harmed? It’s workers who are harmed,” he said. “The job opportunities are reduced.”
He did not propose specific reforms, but said the finance ministry “must point out problems it sees, because it has an effect on the entire economy.”
Reducing overcapacity in industrial sectors such as steel and coal has become an urgent priority for the world’s second-largest economy as it seeks to transition away from investment-led economic growth toward a consumer-driven model.
However, such cuts have raised worries of vast layoffs akin to the wave of 30 million job losses experienced in the 1990s when Beijing shuttered thousands of state-run companies, and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is always keen to prevent social unrest.
At Saturday’s opening of the NPC, the annual meeting of the CCP parliament, Premier Li Keqiang (李克強) pledged to kill “zombie enterprises” and cut excess capacity through mergers or liquidations.
On Sunday, the country’s top economic planner reiterated a goal of reducing steel capacity — an industry suffering a global glut — by between 100 million and 150 million tonnes within five years, but added that such cuts would “definitely not” cause mass unemployment.
Last month, the minister of human resources and social security estimated there would be 1.8 million layoffs due to restructuring in the coal and steel industries, without giving a timescale.
To cushion such blows, Li on Saturday said the central government would allocate 100 billion yuan (US$15 billion) over the next two years for a labor resettlement fund.
Tough reforms decreed by central authorities have often suffered from a lack of implementation in China.
Lou said that pushing through change would require determination from top authorities and a willingness to “gnaw the hard bone,” an expression roughly equivalent to “bite the bullet.”
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