China Daily (Hong Kong)

Share swap program to get oversight

Three to five State firms, two central financial institutio­ns in first batch

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s finance ministry will coordinate with other government department­s to introduce a policy regime which supervises and evaluates the pilot program that will transfer shares of Stateowned enterprise­s and financial institutio­ns to the country’s social security fund.

Starting from next year, different groups of SOEs and financial institutio­ns will be approved stage by stage for share transfer, and the whole process is expected to be finished soon, said the Ministry of Finance.

Experts expect that the regime may include detailed standards for selecting specific enterprise­s as the targets, and the methods to assess the value of transferre­d assets.

According to an announceme­nt, which was released on Nov 18 by the country’s cabinet, the State Council, 10 percent of the State-owned equity will be transferre­d to the National Council for Social Security Fund and wholly State-owned enterprise­s.

By the end of this year, three to five SOEs and two central financial institutio­ns in several provinces are planned to be selected as the first batch to start the program, the State Council’s statement said.

A report from The Economic Observer, a local business newspaper, said on Monday that China Resources Group, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and China Constructi­on Bank may be included in the list of the first batch.

It also said that the Ministry of Finance will be in charge of the first round of enterprise­s’ selection, after which it will coordinate with the State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission and ask for opinion from the enterpris- es themselves.

The State-owned Assets Supervisio­n and Administra­tion Commission didn’t respond on this informatio­n.

This pilot program is aiming to ease the pressure of pension payments through making up for possible shortfalls as the aging population continues to grow, and it will cut the burden of the working generation by expanding the pension fund scale without raising taxes or pension contributi­on rates, said the Ministry of Finance.

By the end of last year, the total income of China’s social security fund has reached 5.01 trillion yuan ($759.1 billion), up by 8.1 percent from a year earlier, according to the ministry.

The total expenditur­e of the social security fund was 4.36 trillion yuan, a year-on-year rise of 11.5 percent, marking a surplus of 650.8 billion yuan, as the official data showed.

Su Peike, a researcher with the Public Policy Research Institute at the University of Internatio­nal Business and Economics in Beijing, said that the ratio of the transferre­d State-owned equity could possibly be continuall­y increased when the pilot program sees effective results, to better offset the large pension gap.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China