59
Today,
unemployment insurance
in China,
initiated in 1986 and revised in 1999, covers
about 105 million urban individuals (in 2004).
117
The maximum duration is high by
international comparisons, between 12 and 24 months (depending on how long premiums
have been paid for a particular individual). The replacement rate (the ratio of the benefit
to previous wage) is fairly generous for many “urban insiders” – both compared
to income
security for workers in many other developing countries and (of course) to the income
level of unemployed workers not covered by the system. The OECD (2002, pp. 566-567)
reports a replacement rate of about 50 percent for a large fraction of those insured,
although there are also reports of lower levels (about 30 percent) for others.
118
Presumably, the rationale for this relative generosity towards some urban workers is to
create an acceptable substitute for the receding job guarantees by state-owned enterprises.
The system may, however, run into financing problems in the future, since structural
unemployment in China is likely to be high during coming decades.
119
A
financially and
socially safer approach might have been if China, at its present stage of economic
development, had chosen a less generous system for the most favored groups, and instead
tried to cover a larger share of the labor force. Since unemployment insurance is difficult
to
extend to the farm population, for which unemployment is even difficult to define,
improved crop-failure legislation, and/or improved natural-disaster relief, might be
substitutes for unemployment insurance for this population.
There is also a “bottom level” safety net in urban areas in the form of means-tested
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