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China to expand public service access for migrant workers

By Thomson Reuters May 22, 2026 | 6:41 AM

BEIJING, May 22 (Reuters) – China issued guidelines on Friday to expand coverage of basic public services to people who don’t have household registration in the cities where they work, a move ​that could help more migrant workers access urban public services.

The ‌changes could provide a stronger social safety net for households and potentially bolster consumer demand in the export-reliant Chinese economy.

The guidelines call on government agencies and local authorities to provide public services, including education and basic medical care, based on people’s ‌regular ​residence rather than their household registration, which ⁠is mainly determined by their ⁠place of birth.

The household registration, or hukou in Chinese, binds a person’s eligibility to public services mainly to their birthplace. The system was adopted in the 1950s for limiting internal migration, especially from ​rural to urban areas.

Migrant workers who hold rural hukou from their hometowns often struggle to access public services in the cities where they ⁠live and work. The government has tried ⁠for more than a decade to reform the system.

GUIDELINES ​EASE ACCESS TO SCHOOLS AND HOUSING

“Providing basic public services by the place ​of residence, gradually eliminating the link between basic public services ‌and household registration, and promoting equal access to basic public services … are conducive to meeting people’s growing needs for a better life,” China’s State Council said in the guidelines.

The guidelines call on local governments to assist ⁠more migrant children – those who move to cities with their parents – to attend public schools and let eligible ones take school entrance exams in their ⁠place of residence.

More cities ‌should expand public rental housing programmes to cover households ⁠with stable employment but no local hukou, and employees ​should ‌be able to participate in the social insurance scheme ​in their ⁠places of work, the guidelines say.

The guidelines also call for relaxing hukou restrictions in sectors such as child care, elderly care and disability support, and encourage provincial-level governments to expand fiscal support for areas with population inflows to pay for public services.

(Reporting by Yukun Zhang and Ryan Woo; Editing ​by Gus Trompiz)