Special Report:Global Financial Crisis
BEIJING, Jan. 29 (Chinese media) -- Trade unions at all levels are striving to
help return migrant workers to locate new jobs by providing them with training
courses, small loans and guidance for job hunting, according to the All-China
Federation of Trade Unions.
Fang Bin, a young man from Weixian County in northern Hebei Province used
to be a migrant worker in the eastern city of Suzhou. But he had to close his
small business and return home last December when he found his market shrank due
to the financial crisis.
The trade union in his hometown came to his aid and invited him to several
seminars on starting new businesses. It provided him with the idea of opening a
rural supermarket in his village, using the 300,000 yuan (42,000 U.S. dollars)
he had saved from his business in Suzhou.
Statistics from the Ministry of Agriculture indicated that from July to
December 2008, 7.8 million of the 130 million migrant workers returned home due
to the drying job market.
Trade unions in Xinyang City in central Henan Province trained about 37,000
out-of-work migrant workers, and recommended about two-thirds of them to new
jobs in the urban area.
Trade unions in Tongling City in eastern Anhui Province planned to add
400,000 yuan (57,000 U.S. dollars) in small loans this year to help migrant
workers start small businesses.
The Shanghai Federation of Trade Unions opened employment agencies
especially for migrant and laid-off workers. 280 enterprises registered for
2,200 positions. More than 1,500 people who sought jobs in those agencies signed
contracts with their employers, according to the All-China Federation of Trade
Unions.
No comments:
Post a Comment