Income irregularity requires a better cure By Xu Binglan (China Daily) Updated: 2006-03-09 06:11
China should start addressing irregularities in income distribution by making
civil servants' salaries transparent, a member of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference (CPPCC) National Committee said yesterday.
Wang Jianlun, who served as a key figure in a CPPCC task force for research
into China's income discrepancies, said government officials' extra benefits
should be included into their salaries to standardize the remuneration system
for civil servants.
By doing so, the government would serve as a model for the standardization of
income systems in the whole society, which is a prerequisite for addressing the
country's widening wealth gap, said Wang a former vice-minister of labour during
a press conference yesterday hosted by the fourth session of the 10th National
Committee of the CPPCC.
Remuneration systems for China's government organs are very complicated.
Officials' incomes are a mixture of salaries based on their rankings in the
hierarchy and many subsidized services and welfare, which range from medical
care to a free car.
State companies and State-funded institutions which range from hospitals to
media organizations have an even more complex income system because employees'
salaries have a similar structure to government officials but also include
bonuses based on personal performance and the performance of the organization.
The intricate salary systems for government departments and State-funded
institutions make it almost impossible to know exactly how much their employees
are paid. As a consequence, it is difficult for tax men to collect income tax a
key instrument in narrowing the wealth gap from officials and those working in
State-funded organizations.
Wang said her task force also advised the government to take necessary steps
to guarantee a government-set minimum income for low-income earners while using
effective tools to "adjust" the incomes of high earners.
"But that does not mean the country should limit high incomes," she said,
adding that "it is a good thing to be rich."
(China Daily 03/09/2006 page2)
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