Women contributed 60 percent to the total output in China's rural
areas as a result of the large number of men leaving local villages
for cities seeking jobs, Tuesday's China Daily reported.
Gu
Xiulian, vice-president of the All-China Women's Federation said
the population shift justifies the increasing popularity of her
federation's production skill training, especially in the
countryside.
In
addition to directly contributing to China's rural economy, many
women are also lending a helping hand to aid others out of
poverty.
At
present, 2,092 villages in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province
are governed by women with the total economic gains from these
localities totaling some one billion yuan (US$120 million) in
2001.
However, a large proportion of laid-off workers in cities are women
and the percentage is expected to increase in the future, according
to Gu, whose federation pledges continued efforts to facilitate the
re-employment of urban female workers through professional training
and small-loan programs.
The Federation has helped some 2.06 million laid-off female workers
to find jobs since the end of 1990s.
Statistics show that women comprise nearly 38.8 percent of China's
urban employees and 65.6 percent of the country's rural
laborers.
(Xinhua News Agency November 19, 2002)
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