Shanghai will raise the minimum monthly wage, subsidies allocated to
residents living below the poverty line, and unemployment insurance from April
1.
The minimum monthly wage will be raised from 840 yuan to 960 yuan,
reflecting the sharp rise in the Consumer Price Index, Bao Danru, vice director
of Shanghai Labor and Social Security Bureau, said at a press conference
yesterday.
Part-time workers will also see their minimum wage rise to
eight yuan per hour from the current 7.5 yuan.
The minimum wages don't
include social insurance fees that companies must pay to cover part of their
employees' medical insurance, unemployment insurance and pension payments. Also
not included are payments for working overtime, traffic allowances and housing
allowances.
Workers who find their payment is less than the minimum wage
can call the hotline 12333 and the bureau will send officials to investigate,
Bao said.
Shanghai was the first city on China's mainland to set up a
minimum wage system. It is the 14th time the city has raised minimum wages since
the system was adopted in 1993.
Statistics show the average monthly
income of city employees in 2007 was 2,892 yuan, a 17.4 percent increase from
2006.
Meanwhile, unemployment insurance will be raised by about 70 yuan
from next month, ranging from 410 yuan to 550 yuan monthly depending on the
recipients' age and how long they have been unemployed.
Downtown
residents who live under the city poverty level will receive subsidies of 400
yuan per month - 50 yuan more than before.
Those living in villages will
get 3,200 yuan a year, the Shanghai Civil Affairs Bureau announced.
By
the end of last year, the subsidies applied to 339,400 downtown residents and
118,300 people in villages.
The Shanghai Medical Insurance Bureau said it
will ensure laid-off people an equal level of individual medical insurance to
city workers.