CHINA’S ‘invisible unemployment’ will become more visible next year, a top Chinese think tank’s report warned as it urged the government to allow more unviable state-owned enterprises to go under.

Invisible unemployment has been the topic of heated discussion recently. In contrast to outright layoffs, invisible unemployment is the practice by which profit-losing state-owned enterprises adopt a strategy of idling employees while giving them part of their wages. They do so owing to pressure from employees as well as from authorities to prevent social unrest.

However, the annual economic forecast from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences predicts that because of the glut of capacity in the heavy industry sector, more SOEs in the sector will ‘inevitably’ face restructuring and bankruptcy next year, and layoffs will increase.

“With the export sector encountering difficulties as more labour-intensive companies move abroad, jobs created by the sector will drop. However, the services sector will provide more jobs, so 100m new jobs will be created next year,” the report said.


The report urged the government to give the bankruptcy of SOEs a higher priority next year. Failure to do so will ‘amplify the risks of market-oriented reform’


The warning came as Wuhan Iron & Steel Co, a major SOE, planned to slash 6,000 jobs in three months, while its parent company might cut 11,000 jobs and reduce salaries by 20pc next year.

Wuhan Iron & Steel spokesman Sun Jin said the company is planning ‘human resource optimisation’. The changes will differ from layoffs since they won’t alter workers’ ‘salaries or organisational relationships’ with the company, and the company would still fund their insurance and pension plans, Sun said.

Analysts said this appears to be a typical ‘invisible unemployment’ case.

Wuhan Iron & Steel is contending with a massive supply glut and near-record low prices. In the first three quarters, the company had a net loss of 1bn yuan ($155m), while the sale of every metric tonne of steel incurred a loss of 32 yuan, according to the company’s financial report.

Zhou Fangsheng, deputy director of the China Enterprise Reform and Development Society, said his recent survey of Northeast China found that the percentage of SOEs losing money is catching up with the level of the late 1990s, the worst period for SOEs, when 39.7pc of them faced losses. Many companies have halted or partially ceased production, which has delayed wage payments.

“It is not uncommon that SOEs that are actually losing money reported that they are making a profit. If they don’t do that, the situation would be worse,” he said.

The CASS report urged the government to give the bankruptcy of SOEs a higher priority next year. Failure to do so will ‘amplify the risks of market-oriented reform’, it warned.

—Courtesy: China Daily / Asia News Network

Published in Dawn, Business & Finance weekly, December 21st, 2015

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