Sun | May 17, 2026

Gov't promises annual wage increase

Published:Thursday | February 9, 2012 | 12:00 AM

BEIJING (AP):

China's government yesterday promised to raise minimum wages by 13 per cent a year through 2015 and to launch measures to generate 45 million new jobs.

Communist leaders face pressure to spread China's prosperity more widely and narrow a yawning gap between a wealthy elite and the poor majority. Beijing froze wage rates to help companies stay afloat after the 2008 global crisis but has boosted minimum pay in many areas over the past two years following worker protests.

tax break

Yesterday's Cabinet announcement promised tax breaks and loans for small employers and for jobless workers who want to start their own businesses. It covers the period of the Communist Party's five-year development plan that took effect in 2011.

The announcement said 25 million urban workers need to find jobs each year and millions of people in the countryside are moving from farmwork to other employment.

The plunge in global demand after the 2008 crisis wiped out tens of millions of jobs in manufacturing and other export-linked industries. Many laid-off workers found new jobs in projects financed by the government's stimulus but the urgency of generating employment has increased as the impact of the spending faded.

The latest initiatives are part efforts to revive growth in the private sector that creates most of China's new jobs and wealth.