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Viewing cable 09BEIJING3168, CHINA/ONE-CHILD/PENSIONS: HOW TO SUPPORT AN AGING

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
09BEIJING3168 2009-11-25 06:41 2011-08-30 01:44 CONFIDENTIAL Embassy Beijing
VZCZCXRO7950
RR RUEHCN RUEHGH RUEHVC
DE RUEHBJ #3168/01 3290641
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
R 250641Z NOV 09
FM AMEMBASSY BEIJING
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 6934
INFO RUEHOO/CHINA POSTS COLLECTIVE
RUEHC/DEPT OF LABOR WASHDC
RUCPDOC/USDOC WASHDC
RUEATRS/DEPT OF TREASURY WASHINGTON DC
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 04 BEIJING 003168 
 
SIPDIS 
 
USTR FOR STRATFORD/MAIN; 
TREASURY FOR OIA CHRIS WINSHIP 
LABOR FOR ILAB 
 
E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/25/2019 
TAGS: PINR ELAB ESOC ECON EFIN CH
SUBJECT: CHINA/ONE-CHILD/PENSIONS: HOW TO SUPPORT AN AGING 
POPULATION (C-AL9-01354) 
 
REF: A. SECSTATE 71045 
     B. BEIJING 02795 
     C. BEIJING 00281 
 
Classified By: Economic Minister Counselor William Weinstein, reason 1. 
4 (b,d) 
 
1. (U) This cable is also responsive to information requested 
in Reftel A (C-AL9-01354). 
 
2. (SBU) Summary: China's aging population is an important 
focal point for the government, but strategies for addressing 
the pressures caused by an aging population have so far 
focused on social support, and have not included significant 
changes in the "one-child policy" or the pension system.  At 
present, changes to the mandatory retirement age are being 
debated, and discussion among academics and other experts is 
focused on improving services to the aged.  Funding the 
pension system is a problem in many localities, but overall 
the system is currently in surplus, according to contacts. 
Some government officials expect that cutting corruption and 
waste, along with continued economic growth, will bring the 
financial resources needed to cover rising pension costs. 
Others appear to be content to push the problem down the road 
for future leaders.   End Summary. 
 
Little Interest in Adjusting the One Child Policy 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
 
3. (SBU) Contrary to suggestions that China might loosen its 
one-child policy to relieve pressure put on its system by the 
large number of impending retirees, the consistent message 
from China's central leadership in recent years indicates 
that the family planning policy is unlikely to change in the 
near future (reftel B). In December 2006 the Central 
Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and the State 
Council jointly put out a Decision on "Fully Enhancing 
Population and Family Planning Programs and Comprehensively 
Addressing Population Issues" which calls for stabilizing 
existing fertility policy.  This Decision, which is the third 
major CCP policy pronouncement on family planning issues (the 
first Decision was published in 1991 and the second in 2000), 
focuses the long-term orientation of China's family planning 
policies on stabilizing China's low fertility level.  The 
document also expands China's population and family planning 
directives to include responding to an aging population 
through developing a social security and old-age security 
system and establishing organizations and facilities to 
promote old-age services.  The government has repeatedly 
reaffirmed this policy at the highest levels, including 
Premier Wen Jiabao, who emphasized the stability of the 
country's family planning policy in his work reports to the 
National Peoples Congress in 2008 and 2009.  On both 
occasions, Premier Wen highlighted the continuation of the 
current policy of family planning, of which maintaining 
China's low birthrate remains the key component. 
 
4. (SBU) On the whole, experts also do not see fertility 
policy as the focus of government efforts to deal with the 
aging population.  Ru Xiaomei, Deputy Director-General of the 
International Cooperation Department of National Population 
and Family Planning Commission (NPFPC) told EmbOffs in 
late-July that while there has been research on changes to 
family planning policy, no major changes are currently being 
considered.  For aging policy issues, the NPFPC defers to the 
China National Working Commission on Aging (a cross-agency 
advisory and coordinating body of the State Council), whose 
focus is on social support for the elderly as opposed to 
family planning policy. 
 
5. (SBU) Some Chinese academics believe that the one-child 
policy is not sustainable.  The public attention generated by 
recent public statements clarifying family planning policy by 
Shanghai municipality illustrates widespread public interest 
in this question (reftel B).  However, Deputy Director 
General Ru also was dismissive of the suggestion that the 
Shanghai policy pronouncements represented a change in 
policy, explaining that family planning officials in the city 
were simply encouraging those eligible to have a second child 
according to pre-existing regulations to in fact have a 
second child.  She characterized such a campaign as routine, 
though Shanghai family planning officials specifically cited 
as a reason for their efforts that the campaign "can help 
reduce the proportion of aging people and alleviate a work 
shortage in the future." 
 
BEIJING 00003168  002 OF 004 
 
 
 
6. (SBU) Chen Gong, Executive Director of the Institute of 
Aging Studies at Peking University, and professor Mu 
Guangzong, also of Peking University, further emphasized the 
government's focus on developing social support as the 
primary means of addressing the pressures of an aging 
population.  Professor Chen noted that the National 
Commission on Aging supports adjusting the family-planning 
policy to relieve old-age social security concerns (as do 
many other researchers and academics), but the more common 
view is that social security problems can be addressed by 
changing other social support systems like social insurance 
and pensions.  With a greater focus on limited natural and 
government resources, most government experts and policy 
makers support maintaining China's low fertility rate. 
 
Present Retirement Age Policy 
----------------------------- 
7. (SBU) China's retirement age is the same for both public 
and private sectors.  For males, the retirement age is 60, 
for female intellectuals (this category also includes civil 
servants and bureaucrats) it is 55, and for female workers it 
is 50.  The mandatory retirement age is higher at the upper 
levels of the government: for vice-ministers and those of 
equivalent rank, it is 60 years of age for both genders, and 
for those at ministerial or equivalent rank, it is 65. 
However academics reported that in public service institutes 
(such as schools and hospitals) and in the civil service, 
enforcement of these limits has been lax, and it is quite 
easy for those at higher levels to delay retirement for 
several years. 
 
Pension Fund Administration 
--------------------------- 
8. (C) Pension funds at both central and local levels are 
administered by MOHRSS (Ministry of Human Resources and 
Social Security).  Funds are largely pooled at the county and 
municipal level by the local branch of MOHRSS, which also 
collects and distributes these funds.  According to Zhang 
Juwei, Deputy Director of the Institute of Population and 
Labor Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 
while the pension system overall is currently in surplus, 
many localities are in deficit.  According to Zhang, local 
governments are required to attempt to make up the 
difference, but the Central Government must take up the 
burden if the localities can not. 
 
9. (U) All employees and employers are required to pay into a 
pension fund administered by local or municipal governments, 
and only those who have been paying contributions for at 
least 15 years and have reached the retirement age are 
eligible to receive a pension.  Although the precise amounts 
vary by region, the standard practice in urban areas is for 
an employer to contribute an amount equaling 20 percent of a 
worker's wages to a pooled local or municipal fund, while the 
worker contributes 8 percent to a segregated personal 
retirement savings account. Only those workers who are able 
to retire in the municipality are able to receive payouts 
from the pooled retirement funds (e.g. many migrant laborers 
are not able to collect these funds on retirement as they are 
not official residents in the urban area where they worked). 
Upon retiring, the payout amounts vary by region and 
locality. 
 
10. (U) In rural areas, on the other hand, pensions are 
entirely funded by individuals' contributions.  In October of 
2008, 10 percent of China's counties started a trial program 
to provide rural residents with a new pension program 
identical to the one available in urban areas, with 
contributions which would normally be provided by an employer 
coming from the central government instead. 
 
Insuring Pensions 
----------------- 
 
11. (U) China's pension funds are insured by local financial 
authorities.  If a fund is unable to meet its payout 
requirements, it must turn first to the provincial government 
and then to the central government for assistance.  The NSSF 
(National Social Security Fund), which directly under the 
control of the State Council, also plays a role in funding 
pensions by managing funds allocated from the central budget. 
 The majority of the NSSF pool is invested in state-owned 
enterprises and banks, with just 20 percent invested in the 
private sector.  The proportion invested in the private 
 
BEIJING 00003168  003 OF 004 
 
 
sector is expected to increase in the near future, however. 
About half of the fund has been placed in the hands of 
private Chinese and international investment management 
funds. The NSSF pool was expanded on June 19, 2009, when the 
State Council ruled that 131 state-owned enterprises 
(specific names were not made public) would be required to 
make available a portion of their state-owned shares 
(comprising 10 percent of their total initial public 
offering) to the NSSF for purchase. 
 
12. (SBU) Over the past few years the amount allocated to the 
NSSF fund from the Central government has grown steadily -- 
the 2009 National People's Congress approved a budget with an 
expenditure of 335.1 billion Yuan (US$ 49.2 billion) on 
social security (although this amount also includes 
non-pension related expenditures, such as standard of living 
subsidies for rural areas), which represented an increase of 
22.1 percent from the 2008 budget allocation.  Similarly, the 
2008 social security expenditure target increased from that 
of 2007 by 24.1 percent, which was an increase of 13.7 
percent from 2006. 
 
Pension System Reform Policy Options 
------------------------------------ 
 
13. (C) Zheng Shangyuan, Professor of Labor Law and Social 
Security at Tsinghua University School of Law, and Zhang 
Juwei, Deputy Director of the Institute of Population and 
Labor Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, 
said that China has three options to deal with rising pension 
costs from an aging population: expand social insurance 
coverage and collect contributions from more citizens; delay 
the retirement age; or lower the rate of increase of outgoing 
pension payments.  Which option the government will take in 
the future will depend on its ability to sustain future 
economic development, according to Professors Zheng and 
Zhang.  Nevertheless, they noted that while increasing 
pension costs would be a challenge, it would be manageable if 
China continues to "get richer and richer" and probably would 
not lead to a crisis.  Professor Zhang added that the most 
critical current problem is a lack of national level 
"pooling" of pension contributions.(reftel C)  A lack of 
coordination among regional and local pooling of pension 
funds leads to an uneven and inefficient pension payment 
system. Central pooling would also make pensions more 
geographically portable.  Professor Zhang noted that the 
government's recently announced "universal low benefit 
pension plan," which calls for providing flexible benefits to 
rural elderly citizens, is a good start and a practical way 
to expand coverage. 
 
14. (C) Professors Zheng and Zhang opined that the graying 
society and its accompanying stress on the pension system are 
not issues of great concern at the highest levels of the 
Central Government.  Professor Zheng said officials are aware 
of the issue but are not actively debating it within the 
bureaucracy.  He cited as evidence the fact that the 
government has yet to form a panel or working group to 
address shortfalls in the pension system.  The government 
believes, he said, that adequate funds could be obtained to 
address the problem by cutting back on wasteful spending and 
corruption.  China likely will also be richer by the time the 
crunch (estimated for 2016 or 2017) hits, according to Zheng. 
 In fact, Professor Zhang noted that many leaders may not 
care greatly about the potential crisis, because it will only 
become pressing after they are already out of office.  Zhang 
also commented that China should have the fiscal resources to 
deal with the pension issue, so he views it more of a social 
problem. 
 
Raising Retirement Age as a Policy Option 
------------------------------------------ 
15. (SBU) One suggestion for strengthening the pension 
system, which outside observers have put forward, has been to 
raise the mandatory retirement age.  The Central Government 
reportedly has been studying the proposal since April 2008, 
and recent Chinese media reports seem to suggest that the 
government agrees with many editorials in the 
state-controlled press that have advocated in favor of such a 
plan.  In July 2008, MOHRSS stated that no change in the 
general retirement age (as opposed to that for intellectuals) 
would be made until at least 2020, explaining that the 
current levels of unemployment make such a move inopportune. 
However, an unnamed government source cited in the Beijing 
Times in December 2008 said that a plan under consideration 
 
BEIJING 00003168  004 OF 004 
 
 
would raise the retirement age for women in 2010 and for men 
in 2015, in both cases to age 65. 
 
16. (SBU) Also in December 2008, the Beijing municipal 
government proposed raising the women's retirement age on par 
with that of men, framing the issue as one of gender 
equality.  Prominent members of the government, also speaking 
in terms of women's rights and not in direct reference to 
problems associated with funding for the pension system, 
supported the change, according to local press.  However, in 
May 2009, it was reported that some members of the Beijing 
Municipal People's Congress--mainly academics and 
physicians--had expressed reservations over this proposed 
change, because it would deprive certain women of the option 
to retire early.  Municipal authorities claimed to have 
received 519 suggestions from the general public on the 
issue, "including 219 that agree and 210 that disagree." 
 
17. (C) Tsinghua law professor Zheng Shanyuan told Econoffs 
that in general, while those in the government charged with 
managing the pension program favor raising the retirement 
age, those charged with employment promotion strongly oppose 
it, believing that it would lead to an unemployment problem. 
Zheng himself believes that in spite of this opposition, the 
retirement age could still be raised, because the problem of 
unemployment will lessen as soon as China emerges from the 
current economic crisis, while the graying of the society 
will become an increasingly serious issue. 
 
COMMENT 
------- 
18. (C) While the government recognizes the budgetary risks 
posed by China's aging population, it appears that concerns 
about employment stability and resource scarcity are driving 
policy decision making.  The government has repeatedly 
emphasized that China's low-fertility rate policy will 
continue. Similarly, policy makers appear confident that 
continued economic growth can alleviate the risk of a crisis 
in the pension system.  However, concern about social 
stability likely will push the government to deal with issues 
of the ageing population through addressing persistent 
shortcomings in the social safety net. 
HUNTSMAN