Transparency on social support fee is necessary
Updated: 2013-07-15 21:20
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
||||||||
The government should clarify how the social support fee, the money paid for having more than one child, is used in case the family planning policy is misled, said an article in South Metropolis Daily (excerpts below).
Family planning is an important national policy that helps regulate the growth of the population. Parents must pay the government the compulsory social support fee for children born beyond the family planning policy's limit.
The fee is used to "adjust the use of natural resources, promote environmental protection and subsidize the government's input in social public causes", according to the top legislature.
However, the use and collection of the fee largely remains unknown to the public. It is estimated the fee amounts to more than 20 billion yuan ($3.23 billion) each year.
In some places, to encourage the officials of grassroots family planning commissions to collect the fee, 5 percent of the fee is reportedly handed to the provincial family planning authorities; 10 percent to the city authorities and 85 percent is left for the county and town authorities.
Collecting the fee becomes a profitable business and a reliable income source for officials of the family planning system. As long as the parents pay the fee, they can have as many children as they like.
This fee is not an administrative fine, but a compulsory administrative fee. The government has the obligation to reveal how the money has been used.
- US star sprinter fails drug test
- Protests erupt after verdict
- Color Run in London promotes healthy living
- Urumqi residents hand in weapons
- Pool jammed in summer heat
- Last stop for the telegrams of India
- Heavy rain, strong winds as Soulik heads inland
- 8 dead, 19 injured after bus leaves road in Jinghong
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
More concerns over camps |
Challenging times on 'high-speed Silk Road' |
5th China-US S&ED |
Jiangnan Style |
Coming to a screen near you |
Hospital ship lends a helping hand |
Today's Top News
Four GSK China execs held for investigation
Asiana survivors coping with post traumatic stress
China's Q2 GDP growth slows to 7.5%
Canada mourns victims of train accident
Air crash students return to families
Snowden says he won't release harmful US data
Local governments face financing woes
Zimmerman not guilty
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |