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 | The photo shows a crowed job center in Nanton, 
 East China's Jiangsu Province, January 21, 
 2005. |   
 Laid-off workers are again the crux of China's unemployment problem 
 this year, while creating jobs for young people also is making the 
 situation tougher. 
  Wang Yadong, a senior official at the Ministry of Labour and Social 
 Security said yesterday the year will conclude the government's three-year 
 policy of actively promoting employment. 
  The plan was adopted in 2002 to provide subsidies and job opportunities 
 for laid-off workers. 
  A system of unemployment insurance will take its place, he told a news 
 briefing. 
  "We will stop subsidies for those registered in re-employment service 
 centres and include those who are not able to find jobs again in the 
 system," said Wang, deputy director of the ministry's department of 
 training and employment. 
  By the end of last year, there were 1.53 million laid-off workers from 
 State-owned companies nationwide, with 930,000 currently registered in 
 re-employment service centres. 
  Ministry spokesman Hu Xiaoyi said officials will expand the 
 unemployment insurance system this year to employees of non-State-owned 
 enterprises. 
  Ministry statistics show 105.8 million people were covered by 
 unemployment insurance at the end of last year, 2.1 million more than the 
 previous year. 
  So far, a dozen provinces - mostly in the east and the north - have 
 established such systems, while western areas will catch up gradually, 
 Wang added. 
  Meanwhile, the number of jobless young people is on the rise . Fourth quarter 
 statistics show young people make up an increasing part of the unemployed, 
 up 0.7 per cent from the same period over last year. 
  Some experts predict 2005 will see 500,000 more unemployed college 
 students than last year. 
  Analysts say the upward expansion in college enrolment in recent years 
 is much to blame since it has ignored unbalanced industrial development 
 and has failed to match market demands by profession. 
  The grim employment situation can also be found in some poor areas, 
 several industries and some special groups, including the disabled. 
  "We can anticipate a difficult situation in some old industrial cities 
 in Northeast China and cities that are short of resources," said Wang. 
  The ministry said it will lay out a new package of measures to solve 
 employment quandaries among college students, the rural labour force and 
 laid-off workers during the third quarter of this year. 
  (China Daily)  |