China considers household registration system reform

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2008-03-04 16:25

BEIJING - China is working to reform its two-tiered household registration system amid growing calls to allow freer migration between cities and the countryside.

"We've been all along studying and pushing ahead the reform," said Wu Heping, spokesman for the Ministry of Public Security.

The goal is to establish a unified household registration system, ease the restrictions on migration to eventually lead to a rational and orderly flow of the population, he said.

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Under the guidance of the State Council, China's Cabinet, consultations are continuing among 14 ministries including Wu's, the National Development and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Labor and Social Security, Wu was quoted Tuesday by the Chinese-language Chengdu Commercial Daily as saying.

According to him, a circular of suggestions for the change has been drafted, and pilot reforms have been carried out in some areas.

China's household registration system, set up in 1958, divides the population into rural households and non-rural households, and individual interests and rights, such as education, healthcare, housing and employment, are linked to the household registration.

Under the system, rural citizens have no access to social welfare in cities, even though they may live and work there.

However, since the adoption of the reform and opening-up policy, China has witnessed a huge migration of rural labor to urban areas in search of work.

"The system, once playing an important role as a basic data provider and for identification registration, has become neither scientific nor rational given the irresistible trend of migration," said Prof. Duan Chengrong, director of the Research Center for Population and Development under the Renmin University of China.

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