New jobless figure coming next year By Liu Li (China Daily) Updated: 2005-10-22 06:17
China will announce its unemployment rate using the investigation method
starting from the latter half of next year to replace the current urban
registered unemployment index.
And one economic researcher said the announced figure using the new method
will be more accurate even though it may be twice as high as the one currently
provided.
Yu Xiuqin, spokeswoman for the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Statistics, told
China Daily that authorities began using the investigation method to calculate
the unemployment rate in 2000, but the figure has never been made public.
A sample survey of the employment situation will be conducted next month
throughout the country together with the census, the National Bureau of
Statistics said.
China has been calculating the urban registered unemployment rate since 1994,
but overseas critics have challenged the figure's accuracy.
Some experts in China said one reason is that only those who registered with
the government were included in the unemployment figures, pointing out that most
of the unemployed residents failed to register.
Economic researchers say they believe the new unemployment rate will be more
accurate.
"The unemployment index calculated through investigation will be much bigger
than the current urban registered unemployment rate," Yu said.
"The change was done to follow international practices."
She said the commencement date for the new calculation would start sometime
after July 1.
The National Bureau of Statistics would not confirm Yu's starting date.
"Announcement of the unemployment rate using the investigation method still
needs discussions among various government departments," a bureau source said.
Wang Xiaolu, deputy director of the National Economic Research Institute
under the China Reform Foundation, told China Daily on Friday that the country
would benefit from a more accurate unemployment rate.
"The new unemployment rate using the investigation method will mean more
people will be covered by unemployment insurance," he said.
Many unemployed people, such as some migrant labourers and laid-off workers
from State-owned enterprises, are not currently covered by the insurance system,
Wang said.
"I believe that the government will attach greater importance to the issue
then," he said, calling the registered unemployment figure "a transitional one."
Wang predicted that if the figures using the investigation method were
announced, the number would be twice as high as the current number.
The researcher said that the bigger unemployment rate would not stir
frustration among residents.
Wang also expressed his hope that a figure for what he called insufficient
employment in the countryside could be calculated, as well.
"For example, a three-member family has farmland of only 0.2 hectares. In
fact, the land does not need that many labourers," he explained.
Wang called for accelerated urbanization to solve the problem of employment
of rural migrants.
"It is necessary to close the gap between rural and urban educational
services," he said, "especially in occupational education."
(China Daily 10/22/2005 page2)
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