CHINA> National
China to boost spending on welfare, education, health care
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2009-03-05 21:03

BEIJING -- The Chinese government pledged on Thursday to increase spending on social programs including pension and medical reform in 2009 despite pressure from the international financial crisis.

"The more difficulties we face, the greater attention we should pay to ensuring people's well-being and promoting social harmony and stability," Premier Wen Jiabao said in a government work report to the annual session of the parliament that opened here Thursday.

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 NPC and CPPCC 2009

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The central government plans to spend 293 billion yuan (about $42.84 billion) on the social safety net this year, up 17.6 percent or 43.9 billion yuan over the estimated figure for last year, he said.

"Local governments will also increase funding in this area," he said.

The fund will help "expand coverage of social security programs" and "increase social security benefits" of the Chinese, according to the Premier.

The government will allocate an additional 850 billion yuan in the three years beginning on 2009, including 331.8 billion yuan from the central government, to ensure smooth progress in the reform of its medical and health care system.

To promote fairness in education, the government will increase public expenditures on rural compulsory education, and to basically clear the debts incurred in providing nine-year compulsory education in rural areas within three years, Wen said.

The central government will spend 12 billion yuan and local governments will also increase funding to raise salaries of the 12 million primary and secondary school teachers based on a performance-based salary system, according to Wen.

The government will implement a program to ensure "school buildings are the safest and provide the greatest assurance to parents," Wen said.

"We will continue to ensure that maintaining and improving people's life is always the starting and end point of our economic work," he said.

Economists said the lack of health insurance and social security is holding back China's economic development and the government's efforts to spur domestic demand, as people tend to clutch their purses tightly for unexpected disease, a laid-off, or old-age.

MIGRANTS, FARMERS HIGHLIGHTED

The Premier vowed in the report to formulate and implement a method for old-age pensions for the country's 130 million rural migrant workers,  and, at the same time, to introduce a method for transferring old-age pension accounts for workers moving from one region to another.

The government also aims to expand social security programs to cover more "employees in the non-public sector, rural migrant workers, and farmers whose land was expropriated".

Starting from this year, the government will introduce a new policy in all rural areas to subsidize hospitalized childbirth, provide regular prenatal checkups and postpartum visits for women, and monitor the growth of infants and toddlers less than three years of age to prevent birth defects, he said.

China has established several policies concerning social welfare since 1984. By 2008, about 219 million people have pensions and about 317 million have basic medical insurance. An additional 124 million have unemployment insurance, 138 million have work injury insurance and 91 million have childbirth insurance.

China has to invest 5.74 trillion yuan by 2020 in building an all-round social welfare system to enhance people's livelihood, according to the China Development Research Foundation, a government think tank.

The amount will cover all aspects including pension, education, health care, housing, employment and aid to rural residents and migrant workers, the foundation said in a report.

Spending in the next three years will top 2.6 trillion yuan, the report said.

The foundation's chairman Wang Mengkui said the social welfare system should keep pace with the the country's economic development, which was essential to "solve the problem" of the imbalance between urban and rural areas and among regions and to benefit the whole population.

LEGAL BASE FOR SAFETY NET

China's draft law on social insurance, which aims to create a universal safety net for the country's 1.3 billion people, underwent its second reading by the top legislature last December.

The draft specifies a common right for citizens, urban and rural alike, to pay premiums and enjoy old-age pensions and insurance for medical care, work injuries, unemployment and childbirth.

To address the concerns of migrant workers, the social insurance draft  law allows Chinese citizens to pay pension premiums in one place and draw money in another if they migrate to other cities or provinces.

This stipulation is particularly significant as the country has a much more mobile population than in the past.

The draft also determined that a new rural medical system, in which farmers and governments raise funds together, would be included in the medical insurance plan.

MEDICAL REFORM

China's State Council, or Cabinet, passed a long awaited medical reform plan in January this year which promised to spend 850 billion yuan by 2011 to provide universal medical service to the whole population, to make health care more accessible and affordable. .

Growing public criticism of soaring medical fees, a lack of access to affordable medical services, tense doctor-patient relationship and low medical insurance coverage compelled the government to launch the new round of reforms in 2006.

In his report, Wen rolled out a five-point plan that aims to "establish a nationwide basic medical and health care system for both urban and rural areas to begin providing universal coverage":

-- To expand the coverage of medical insurance;

-- To build a basic medicine system that includes a catalogue of drugs that mostly needed by the public

-- To improve the community-level medical and health service system;

-- To promote equal access for all to basic public health services;

-- To initiate reform on public hospitals.

Health Minister Chen Zhu said the government funds will go to both the medical insurance sector and the health service sector, though "the proportion has not been decided yet".

"One thing is for sure that the new type of rural cooperative medical care system and medical service in the cities will take larger share in the funds," said Chen, also member of the 11th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference (CPPCC), the nation's top political advisory body.

Ba Furong, deputy to the 11th NPC and chief of Anshan Medical Association in northeastern Liaoning Province, said: "Medical reform is a tricky issue everywhere in the world. It is also in the eye of public attention."

"We must choose the right priority in pursuing the medical reform, and the five tasks outlined in the work report provided the best point to begin with," Ba said.

"The government's increased investment in welfare, education, and medical service will relieve the burden of millions of families, shore up confidence in consumption, spur domestic demand, and promote steady and fast economic development," said Zhao Peng, deputy to the 11th NPC.