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Carbon Capture Project by Wah Kwong & Qiyao Environ Tec Receives AiP

China-Jordan art exhibition held in Beijing to celebrate 46 years of diplomatic ties

A greying China may have to put off retirement Workers aren t happy

  Vivian Wang and Joy Dong, The New York Times  Published: 28 Apr 2021 11:52 AM BdST Updated: 28 Apr 2021 11:52 AM BdST FILE People work at an office in Beijing on May 10, 2018. Most Chinese workers retire by 60. But with the population aging and pension funds running low, the government says that must change. (Gilles Sabrié/The New York Times) For Meng Shan, a 48-year-old urban management worker in the Chinese city of Nanchang, retirement can’t come soon enough. ); } Meng, who is the equivalent of a low-level, unarmed law-enforcement official, often has to chase down unlicensed street vendors, a task he finds physically and emotionally taxing. Pay is low. Retirement, even on a meagre government pension, would finally offer a break.

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