The Ministry of Agriculture yesterday pledged to speed up the
structural reform of rural employment to help solve the problem of
China's surplus rural workforce of 100 million.
The country had a total of 480 million rural workers at the end of
2000, with 328 million of them engaged in agricultural production,
according to ministry figures.
The number of surplus rural labourers in China is expected to
increase by over 8 million a year over the next five years,
according to Xue Liang, director of the ministry's Development
Planning Department.
Xue yesterday delivered a report to the Agriculture and Rural
Affairs Committee of the National People's Congress - China's top
legislative body - on how his ministry will meet the opportunities
and challenges brought by China's entry into the World Trade
Organization.
He
said Chinese experts have estimated that the country's WTO entry
will lead to there being 20 million fewer job vacancies for the
nation's farmers.
"The problem of surplus rural labourers will become even more
serious in major grain, cotton and oil-producing areas," he
said.
Xue said the ministry will work to bring labour-intensive
industries such as animal breeding and aquaculture into full play
to create more job opportunities for farmers.
At
the same time, the ministry will strive to expand the range of
possible employment for farmers, Xue said.
The ministry vowed to promote the construction of small towns and
cities, making them "a reservoir" for the creation of job
opportunities for surplus rural labourers.
It
said that, in this way, more rural labourers will move from
traditional agricultural production to manufacturing and service
sector, which is an important component of structural reform in
rural employment.
The ministry will enhance training to improve farmers' working
skills and their ability to adapt to the market economy.
It
will help establish intermediate agencies to help farmers find jobs
in the service sector, Xue said.
The ministry will continue its support for the development of
township enterprises so that they will employ more rural labourers,
Xue added.
The nation's township enterprises currently employ 128 million
rural workers.
The ministry will give the same emphasis to the structural reform
of rural employment as it has already given to the structural
reform of rural industry, Xue told the legislators.
China's entry into the WTO last December has had a direct negative
impact on Chinese rural products, some of which were uncompetitive,
said Xue.
Increased imports of foreign agricultural products will sharpen
competition in the domestic market. This will further reduce the
ability of agriculture to absorb rural labourers, Xue added.
(China Daily February 27, 2002)
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