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Towards a Society with Social Protection for All : A Concise History of Social Security Transformation in Modern China PDF

218 Pages·2017·2.149 MB·English
by  HuiJiaZhouHong
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Preview Towards a Society with Social Protection for All : A Concise History of Social Security Transformation in Modern China

China Insights Hong Zhou Towards a Society with Social Protection for All A Concise History of Social Security Transformation in Modern China China Insights Chairman of Editorial Board Wang Weiguang Vice Chairman of Editorial Board Li Jie, Li Yang (Standing Executive), Li Peilin, Cai Fang Editorial Board Members Bu Xianqun, Cai Fang, Gao Peiyong, Hao Shiyuan, Huang Ping, Jin Bei, Li Jie, Li Lin, Li Peilin, Li Yang, Ma Yuan, Wang Lei, Wang Weiguang, Wang Wei, Yang Yi, Zhou Hong, Zhao Jianying, Zhuo Xinping This book series collects and presents cutting-edge studies on various issues that have emerged during the process of China’s social and economic transformation, and promotes a comprehensive understanding of the economic, political, cultural andreligiousaspectsofcontemporaryChina.Itbringstogetheracademicendeavors by contemporary Chinese researchers in various social science and related fields that record, interpret and analyze social phenomena that are unique to Chinese society, its reforms and rapid transition. This series offers a key English-language resource for researchers and students in China studies and related subjects, as well asforgeneralinterestreaderslookingtobettergrasptoday’sChina.Thebookseries isacooperationprojectbetweenSpringerandChinaSocialSciencePressofChina. More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/13591 Hong Zhou Towards a Society with Social Protection for All A Concise History of Social Security Transformation in Modern China 123 Hong Zhou ChineseAcademy of Social Sciences Beijing China Translated byJiaHui ISSN 2363-7579 ISSN 2363-7587 (electronic) ChinaInsights ISBN978-981-10-4668-1 ISBN978-981-10-4669-8 (eBook) DOI 10.1007/978-981-10-4669-8 JointlypublishedwithChinaSocialSciencesPress TheprinteditionisnotforsaleinTheMainlandofChina.CustomersfromTheMainlandofChinaplease ordertheprintbookfrom:ChinaSocialSciencesPress. ThisbookispublishedwithfinancialsupportfromChineseFundfortheHumanitiesandSocialSciences. LibraryofCongressControlNumber:2017945692 ©SpringerNatureSingaporePteLtd.andChinaSocialSciencesPress2017 Thisworkissubjecttocopyright.AllrightsarereservedbythePublishers,whetherthewholeorpart of the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation, broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission orinformationstorageandretrieval,electronicadaptation,computersoftware,orbysimilarordissimilar methodologynowknownorhereafterdeveloped. The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publicationdoesnotimply,evenintheabsenceofaspecificstatement,thatsuchnamesareexemptfrom therelevantprotectivelawsandregulationsandthereforefreeforgeneraluse. Thepublishers,theauthorsandtheeditorsaresafetoassumethattheadviceandinformationinthis book are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publishers nor the authorsortheeditorsgiveawarranty,expressorimplied,withrespecttothematerialcontainedhereinor for any errors or omissions that may have been made. The publishers remains neutral with regard to jurisdictionalclaimsinpublishedmapsandinstitutionalaffiliations. Printedonacid-freepaper ThisSpringerimprintispublishedbySpringerNature TheregisteredcompanyisSpringerNatureSingaporePteLtd. Theregisteredcompanyaddressis:152BeachRoad,#21-01/04GatewayEast,Singapore189721,Singapore Series Foreword SincetheOpiumWar,modernChinadevelopedthroughWestern-Chineseascome under attack and been bullied for its backwardness; this cultural circumstance has given many Chinese people a psychological inferiority complex, as China has laggedbehindothercountriestechnologically,institutionallyandculturally.Efforts tochangethesituationinwhichWesterncountrieswerestrongbutChinawasweak andtorevitalizeChinaneededtostartwithculturalcriticismandculturerenovation. Therefore, the Chinese people turned their eyes to the outside world and learned from Japan, Europe, the USA, and even Soviet Russia. We have always been overwhelmed by stress and anxiety and have had a burning desire to reverse the state of being bullied as a result of underdevelopment, poverty, and weakness and to catch up with and surpass the Western powers. In pursuing the more than one-hundred-year-olddreamofbuildingapowerfulcountryandrevivingChina,we have focusedon understanding andlearningfrom others,butseldom,if ever, have others learned from and understood us. This has not greatly changed in the course ofmodernizationsinceChina’sreformandopeningupin1978.Thetranslationand introduction of many Western works in the 1980s and 1990s is a very good example. This is the history of the Chinese people’s understanding of the rela- tionship between China and the rest of the world since the beginning of modern times. At the same time, in pursuing the dream of turning China into a powerful country and rejuvenating it through material (technological) criticism, institutional criticismandculturalcriticism,theChinesepeoplehavestruggledtofindapaththat would make the country prosperous and the people strong while preventing the country from being ruined and the race from being destroyed. This path first rep- resents a thought, a banner, and a soul. The key issue has been what kind of thought,bannerandsoulcansavethecountry,makingitprosperousandthepeople strong. For more than one hundred years, the Chinese people have constantly carried outexperiments andattempts amidsthumiliation,failure andanxiety. They haveexperiencedfailureinadoptingadvancedWesterntechnologyandthoughton the basis of safeguarding China’s feudal system and practicing a constitutional monarchy after the collapse of the Western capitalist political path and a great v vi SeriesForeword setback in worldwide socialism in the early 1990s. The Chinese people ultimately embarkedonapathtowardsasuccessfulrevolutionwithnationalindependenceand liberation; in particular, they have adopted a path leading to the socialist modern- ization of China—a road towards socialism with Chinese characteristics—by combining the theoretical logic of scientific socialism with the historical logic of China’s social development. After more than 30 years of reform and opening up, China’ssocialistmarketeconomyhasrapidlydeveloped;tremendousachievements have been made in economic, political, cultural and social constructions; compre- hensive national strength, cultural soft power and international influence have substantially improved; and a great success has been achieved in socialism with Chinesecharacteristics.Althoughthelatterprojecthasnotyetbecomefull-fledged, its systems and institutions have basically taken shape. After more than one hun- dredyearsofpursuingdreams,Chinaisrisingamongthenationsoftheworldwith a greater degree of confidence in the path it has chosen, the theory it has adopted and the institutions it has created. Meanwhile, we should be aware that given the long-standing cognition and cultural psychology of learning from Western countries, we seldom take the ini- tiative in showcasing ourselves—historical China and current China in reality—to the world, though China has emerged as a great world power. Due to a deeply rooted view that “Western countries are strong and China is weak,” developed through Western-Chinese cultural exchanges, Western people and nations seldom have a sense ofChinesehistoryor the currentdevelopmentsin China, let alone an understanding of China’s developmental path and such in-depth issues as the sci- entificity and effectiveness of China’s theory and institutions or their unique value forandcontributionstohumancivilization.Asself-recognitionisnotdisplayed,the “China Collapse Theory,” “China Threat Theory,” “China State Capitalism,” and otherso-calledtheoriescoinedbycertainpeoplewithulteriormotivesanddiffering political views have been widely spread. Duringourdevelopment,basedon“crossingtheriverbyfeelingthestones”,we have paid attention to learning from Western countries, understanding the world andlearningtoknowourselvesthroughWesternexperienceanddiscoursebuthave neglected self-recognition and efforts to let others know us. When we strive to become part of the world in a more tolerant and friendly way, we are not objec- tively, truly understood. Therefore, we should describe the path to the success of socialism with Chinese characteristics, tell Chinese stories, disseminate Chinese experiences, use international expressions to show a real China to the world, and help people around the world realize that the Western manner of modernization is not the endpoint of human historical evolution and that socialism with Chinese characteristics is also a valuable treasure of human thought. This is undoubtedly a very important task for an academic cultural researcher with a sense of justice and responsibility. In this connection, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences organized its top-notch experts and scholars and several external experts to write the China Insightsseries. Thisseries notonly provides anoverviewofChina’spath, theories and institutions but also objectively describes China’s current development in the SeriesForeword vii areas of political institutions, human rights, the rule of law, the economic system, finance, social governance, social security, population policies, values, religious faith, ethnic policies, rural issues, urbanization, industrialization, ecology, ancient civilization, literature, art, etc., thus depicting China in a way that helps readers visualize these topics. Wehopethatthisserieswillhelpdomesticreadersmorecorrectlyunderstandthe course of the more than 100 years of China’s modernization and more rationally look at current difficulties, enhance the urgency for and national confidence in comprehensively intensifying reform, build a consensus on reform and develop- ment and gather strength in this regard, as well as deepen foreign readers’ under- standing of China, thus fostering a better international environment for China’s development. January 2014 Zhao Jianying Foreword People in the twenty-first century could hardly imagine that the social ideal put forward by Karl Marx 130 years ago—From each according to his ability, to each accordingtohisneeds,hasmovedprogressiveyouthsandrevolutionariesofChina and other countries so much in the past century that they were devoted to trans- forming the old society and building the new one. Didtheysucceed?Iftheydid,howdidtheyachieveit,throughvigorousormild social reforms? And what are the lessons we can learn from this process? Following the ideal of “from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs,” people working for social progress and justice have tried numerous institutionalinnovationandpolicyreforms.Thisbookwillintroducehowhavethey achieved the social security for all step by step in order to protect laborers’ rights and interests. ix Acknowledgements To write a book about development history of social security, that is, to tell how China’s social security system was established and how it developed, is my “avocation dream” for so many years. This dream cannot be realized without encouragement and support from my friends and colleagues inside and outside of thisfield.Andhere,IwouldliketoparticularlythankTianXiaobao,formerdirector ofChinaInstitute of LaborandSocial Security, for his sincere encouragementand great support, which are necessary for me. I worked with Tian Xiaobao from mid-1980s, when people forged ahead with reforms and ideals, when people were in pursuit of genuine knowledge. That era broughtupagenerationthatworkedselflesslyforaricherandfairerChina.Atthat time, I made efforts to introduce social security experience of other countries to China, by translating relevant documents for a professor delegation of the Heller School, Brandies University, who visited China. While Mr. Tian, working for the Ministry of Labor, was responsible for receiving and contacting foreign visitors, including professors from the Heller School. Since then, I helped Mr. Tian to organizetrainingprogramsabroadforhisChinaAssociationforLaborStudies,and thuspromotedthespreadofsocialsecurityknowledge.SinceIcamebackChinato work,IhavealsobeeninvitedtoparticipateindiscussionsandresearchesinChina InstituteofLaborandSocialSecurity.Throughtheaboveexperiences,Ihavesome understandingaboutChina’sreformonsocialsecuritysystem.Lastyear,whenIno longer worked asdirector of Institute ofEuropean Studies ofChinese Academy of Social Sciences, I expressed my wish to write a book, which was applauded by Mr.Tian.Henotonlyprovidedenormousrelevantdocuments,contactedMs.Wang Jianlun, former Vice Minister of Human Resources and Social Security, but also read our book, pointed out highlights and problems, and even edited it earnestly. Although Mr. Tian declined to the authorship, he is still worth it for his great support. Hereby, Ialsowouldliketothank Ms.ZhangJunforherinvolvement. Tohelp me pursue my “avocation,” she put aside her work and fully supported me for months. In this book, I was responsible for choosing topics, designing and writing xi

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