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UPDATED: September-5-2008  
More Jobs Offered to the Disabled
 
by LI NING

The Chinese government cannot afford all the expenses of caring for China's 40 million disabled citizens. Efforts are being made to get as many as possible into productive work. This confidence and hope. China now has altogether 28,000 welfare enterprises, mostly in the bigger cities, which offer jobs to some 400,000 disabled people.

I didn't receive a job when I graduated from senior middle school because I cannot use my legs," said 28-year-old Zhang Tongjie. "But because I like to draw I was given egg shells to paint at home for a handicrafts workshop in Beijing. The work is decently paid, and I'm satisfied. My experience told me how important it is for people like me to get jobs that make use of their talents. My ambition is to cooperate with friends and start a workshop for the disabled so that more people like me can work and prove the extent of our abilities."

Zhang is one among the 40 million people in China who suffer from mental or physical disability. Their care is therefore a major concern. With the country's present low level of economic development, the government is unable to finance all the care. Backed by various social organizations, the government is working to create as many job opportunities for the handicapped as possible. It is hoped this will give them greater independence and self-confidence while lightening the financial burden on their families and the state.

According to the China Fund for the Welfare of the Disabled, there are altogether 28,000 welfare enterprises in China, mostly in the larger cities. They offer jobs to over 1 million people, including some 400,000 disabled people, 70 percent of whom are employed locally.

In some advanced cities like Beijing, Dalian, Shanghai, Shijiazhuang, Changzhou and Shashi, all the disabled people who can work are employed. In the rural areas, only 20 percent of such people are working.

Welfare Enterprises

Welfare Factories. About 3060 percent of the employees of the 2,000 or so welfare factories are disabled. These factories enjoy preferential treatment.

The Shanghai No. 1 Low Voltage Electrical Appliances Factory employs many blind or deaf people. The factory makes

(Beijing Review p.19 No. 4, 1987)


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