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All hail China’s new job-seekers
Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province, held its first labor fair of
the lunar new year a few days ago, but the job-seekers gathered there
appeared not to be as enthusiastic as their counterparts of years past.
For the first time, the number of job-hunters fell far short of the
number of vacancies advertised at the fair: 4,000 versus 7,000.
The employers could only raise their salary standards - on average, to
1,160 yuan ($155) a month, representing an increase of 13 percent
compared with previous years.
Similar phenomena also appeared in other cities in the Pearl River Delta
area, one of China’s major manufacturing centers. The area has for years
been the largest employer of migrant laborers from the country’s rural
areas.
The changes sweeping over the job-seeking public have prompted some
economic commentators to cry out in alarm that China is losing its
advantage in cheap labor. But some others have argued against such
worries, saying that on the whole, the country’s labor supply still
exceeds the demand.
Though they contradict each other, the two sides share a common concern:
the impact of changing labor costs on China’s exports, which have been a
major engine driving the nation’s economic growth.
In my opinion, we should be pleased rather than worried about the
situation. Manual laborers can now expect better wages, which is good
for both social justice and the wellbeing of the economy.
Most of the manual workers employed by manufacturers in coastal regions
are migrants from the country’s impoverished rural provinces. In the
past two decades or so, they have contributed greatly to our nation’s
economic development by working diligently, for whatever their employers
would like to pay.
Their pay has been capped at too low a level for too long a time. An
investigation in 2004 found that the average monthly wage for migrant
workers in the Pearl River Delta region had risen only 68 yuan in 12
years.
In the past few years, that level has risen at a comparatively faster
rate. The national average monthly wage for rural migrant workers rose
from the 539 yuan in 2004 to 946 yuan in 2006.
The rises in pay and laborers’ wage expectations can be attributed to a
number of reasons. Two of them merit our notice. One is that rural
residents’ incomes have increased significantly in the past few years
thanks to the strong economic growth and favorable government policies
(the annulment of the agricultural tax, for instance). A survey by the
statistics authorities late last year indicated that rural residents’
per capita cash income had hit 3,321 yuan in the first three quarters of
last year, up 14.8 percent year-on-year.
The low wages at manufacturing plants are no longer enough to attract
rural migrant workers.
The second reason is that rural migrant workers themselves have changed.
The new generation is more knowledgeable and modern-minded than their
parents and less tolerant of harsh working conditions and low pay. They
are more ready to change jobs. And their consumption habits inspire them
to seek higher pay.
These changes are encouraging signs of the progress our society has
made. Rising living standards benefit our economy because they will
bolster the population’s buying power, which is the most essential
contributor to the growth of the economy.
Encouragingly, consumption has shown signs of growing. China’s GDP grew
a hefty 11.4 percent last year, with consumption contributing 4.4
percentage points, investment 4.3 percentage points and exports 2.7
percentage points. Consumption surpassed investment for the first time
in several years.
—The Daily Mail, China Daily news exchange item |