Prudent reform should not be a way to avoid reform
Updated: 2013-10-22 19:43
(chinadaily.com.cn)
|
|||||||||
Making breakthroughs in one part of pension system reform is not an excuse to delay reform in other fields, says an editorial in Southern Metropolis Daily. Excerpts:
It is reported some ministerial departments of the central government have reached a consensus on extending the length of time to pay for one's pension insurance as well as to reform the dual-track model of China's pension systems for civil servants and ordinary citizens.
That the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security has clarified the main direction of reforming the dual-track model pension system and has also emphasized the necessity of extending the paying period of ordinary citizens' pension insurance shows the decision-makers intention to plan the two appeals as a whole as the lowest common denominator that can satisfy both the common citizens and the civil servants.
Prolonging the paying period of ordinary citizens' pension insurance is different from extending the retirement age because most people work much longer than the current minimum requirement of 15 years' paying period for pension insurance. Under the principle of "the more you pay, the more you get", the decision to prolong the paying period of pension insurance will not necessarily be resisted by the people.
The real difficult task is to reform the pension system of civil servants. Yet the authority explained that the prudence of carrying out this reform is to reduce social shock, and all crucial reforms must be taken in small steps.
However, if no concrete breakthroughs can be realized at this crucial occasion and all attention is paid to improving the pension insurance system of ordinary citizens, this pace of reform runs counter to its original intention.
- Beijing Opera troupe perform in Brazil
- Nature's masterpieces
- Riot police off to Libya peacekeeping mission
- Teacher killed, two wounded in Nevada middle school shooting
- Smog wraps northeast, schools forced to close
- Architect looks to the big picture
- Teachers, students divided over Gaokao reform plan
- Dogfight looms over jets
Most Viewed
Editor's Picks
Bribery claims feed milk scandal |
The fish that didn't get away |
Stranded in heavy snow at Qomolangma |
Riding the wave of big bargain buy-ups |
US Sinophile traces the evolution of Chinese words |
The dirt on tomb raiders |
Today's Top News
China, Russia reach new consensuses
Apple expected to unveil new iPads
US helps UN destroy Syria's chemical weapons
CNOOC, CNPC win Brazil oilfield bid
'Historic' sorghum shipment to China
Building a bridge of hearts in the heartland of the US
China issues white paper on Tibet's development
Hollywood must think bigger about China
US Weekly
Geared to go |
The place to be |