FT, March 13, 2016 5:00 am
China coal protests highlight overcapacity tensions
Lucy Hornby in Beijing

Thousands of Chinese coal miners have taken to the streets in a city 
near the Siberian border to protest against unpaid wages, in the first 
direct challenge to Beijing’s plan for orderly downsizing and job cuts 
in the state-owned coal sector.
Beijing has said it would lay aside Rmb100bn ($15.4bn) to “resettle” 
coal and steel workers as part of a plan to cut unproductive capacity in 
both sectors, but local governments and the companies themselves are 
supposed to bear a portion of the costs.

Slowing Chinese growth and the end of the commodities supercycle have 
turned overcapacity into a pressing economic issue for Beijing. Data 
published this weekend showed that in the first two months of this year, 
Chinese production of thermal coal and steel both fell 6 per cent while 
output of metallurgical, or coking, coal — the steel ingredient produced 
by the protesting miners — dropped 10 per cent.

Miners at state-owned Shuangyashan Mine, one of four mines that make up 
ailing Longmay Coal, began a third day of protests holding banners that 
read “We want to eat, we want our wages” and “Lu Hao lies with his eyes 
open” referring Mr Lu, the provincial governor of Heilongjiang province.
Last week Mr Lu said that Longmay had met all its salary obligations and 
criticised the company, which is rapidly becoming the poster child for 
lossmaking state-owned coal groups, for its lack of productivity.
One protesting miner in Shuangyashan told the Financial Times: “He said 
during the National People’s Congress that Heilongjiang had not delayed 
payments to its 80,000 coal miners. Well, at the time he said that, we 
had not gotten our salaries for four months. That’s the key.” He did not 
give his name as Chinese authorities regularly imprison workers who lead 
protests or speak to foreign media.

Mr Lu then said he had been “misinformed” about Longmay’s wage arrears 
problem. He is the youngest member of the Communist party’s Central 
Committee and was considered a rising star among China’s younger leaders 
during the previous administration of Hu Jintao.

Chinese authorities had been loathe to allow lossmaking state-owned 
groups to go bankrupt, in part because of the possibility of mass unrest 
of the type that paralysed the rust-belt north-east during the previous 
round of restructuring, in the late 1990s.

Xiao Yaqing, the head of the State Assets Supervision and Administration 
Commission, told reporters on Saturday: “Those of us who lived through 
the 1990s know that it was very different”, in part because China’s 
economy was much smaller than it is today.
He added: “More mergers mean less bankruptcies and can help us 
peacefully resolve any disputes. I don’t think we will see any return to 
the 1990s.”

Beijing’s plan involves trimming excess capacity across the board while 
allowing the companies themselves to survive or merge into even larger 
entities. However, the result can be large but weak state-owned 
companies such as Longmay, which was formed by merging four state-owned 
coal mines about a decade ago.

The Chinese coal sector is split between privately- or locally-owned 
smaller miners and enormous state-owned mines, many first developed 
before the Communist victory in the Chinese civil war. Many of the 
state-owned mines are lossmaking in part because they are contractually 
obliged to provide coal at below-market prices to the state-owned power 
and steel sectors while maintaining bloated work forces and social 
services as a legacy of their importance to the planned economy.
Additional reporting by Luna Lin
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to