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What could China do to bolster its economy?
#1

Basically, there is 'old China', capital intensive, mostly state-owned smokestack industries, highly leveraged, based on export, industry and investment. The new China is more focuseed on technology, innovation, services, consumer spending.

The problems mostly lie in 'old China'; overleveraged, overcapacity, falling prices (really not what you want when you have excess capacity and are overleveraged) and the authorities are trying to make the transition from old to new China as smooth as possible.

What should be done is fairly easy, much of the overcapacity should be rationalized, and much of the related dubious debts should be written off. But this is a rather brute process, as it will make millions redundant, something which the authorities are reluctant to embark upon.

The chosen path, rollover of credit and keeping it cheap creates a bit of a zombie economy, we know that from Japan in the 1990s. Companies and (shadow) banks persist, but they're not really viable or embark on new activities. Basically it's more difficult to have creation with at least some destruction. Old China is weighing all of China down.

One idea that could work is to extent China's social safety net, this would kill two birds with one stone:

  • It would reduce the exhorbitant household saving rate which is a drag on demand, especially now that old China needs a lot less investment
  • It would make the rationalization of old China more bearable for those involved, smoothing the transition.

The Chinese safety net leaves much to be desired:

The problems in China’s social security system can be traced back to two key events: The break-up of the state-run economy, which had provided urban workers with an “iron rice bowl” (employment, housing, healthcare and pension), and the introduction of the one-child policy in the 1980s, which meant that parents could no longer rely on a large extended family to look after them in their old age. In other words, as the economy developed and liberalized in the 1990s and 2000s, both the state and social structures that had supported workers in their old age, ill-health and during times of economic hardship gradually vanished, leaving a huge vacuum to fill.

| China Labour Bulletin

Pensions:

Despite government attempts to increase pension and other social insurance coverage, the majority of workers still lack an effective welfare safety net. Official figures show that in 2013, only 242 million workers, less than one third of China’s total workforce of around 770 million, had a basic pension.

| China Labour Bulletin

Piecemeal reform culminating in the 2011 Social Insurance Law outsorced much of the safety net to the employment contract:

Both employers and employees are required to make contributions (at different rates) to a pension fund, unemployment insurance fund and medical insurance fund, as well as the Housing Provident Fund. Employers, but not employees, are also required to contribute to the work-related injury and maternity insurance funds.

| China Labour Bulletin

But there are also local funds:

The various insurance funds are managed by local governments and are pooled into provincial or municipal funds. Usually it is the local labour or human resources and social insurance departments that manage the social insurance funds, while the Housing Provident Fund is managed by the local government’s Housing Provident Fund Management Committee.

| China Labour Bulletin

However, the institutional make-up of this creates a rather fragmented system, which can work as a barrier to labor mobility:

Social insurance benefits should remain with workers when they move. However this provision has proved very difficult to implement because of the highly localized nature of the social welfare system in China. Getting different jurisdictions to share information is fraught with bureaucratic and technical difficulties, especially for workers coming from rural areas of China.

| China Labour Bulletin

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#2

Collecting some more factoids

For non-employed persons in both urban and rural areas, the Social Insurance Law provides for a similar basic pension plan that requires residents to pay contributions into an individual account for at least 15 years before becoming eligible for a pension on retirement. The fund is subsidized by the government but monthly pay-outs, especially in rural areas, are generally very low.

| China Labour Bulletin

One of the biggest problems with the current pension system in China is the statutory retirement age; 60-years-old for men and 50-years-old for women workers in enterprises, 55-years-old for women civil servants. These limits were established in the 1950s and are widely acknowledged by policy makers to be no longer realistic in a country where the average life-expectancy is now 75 and there are already about 200 million people over the age of 60.  Government officials have stated openly that the retirement age will have to rise if the pension system is to be sustainable in the long-term. An increase of five years for both men and women is the most likely increase but no definitive plans have been put in place yet. The government’s procrastination on this issue is largely due to popular opposition from workers who understand how difficult it is to get a job in their 50s. See Employment in China for more details. In order to gain more popular support for an increase in the retirement age, employers will have to adopt much more flexible attitudes towards elderly workers and the government will have to reconsider what are the optimal pension contribution rates for both employers and employees.

| China Labour Bulletin

On unemployment insurance:

Both workers and their employers pay into the unemployment insurance system, usually at rates of one and two percent respectively. Workers are eligible for benefits, including continuation of medical insurance, in the event that they become unemployed. The duration of benefits depends on the length of time the employee has paid into the system, with a maximum of 24 months of benefits for those who have been employed for ten years or more. Although employee contributions are based on salary, the benefits paid out are very low. The 1999 Regulations state that unemployment benefits must be lower than the local minimum wage, which is already set at a very low level and can in no way be considered a living wage.

| China Labour Bulletin

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