Per capita pension level of urban and rural residents in China
In 2020, the per capita pension of urban and rural residents in China will be 2088 yuan, and Shanghai, Beijing, Tianjin, Zhejiang, Jiangsu, Qinghai, Guangdong, Ningxia, Hainan, Tibet, Inner Mongolia, Shandong and Xinjiang will exceed the national average.
Personal recommendation
Pension, which is what we call pension, is the most important form of social pension insurance treatment at present. It is related to everyone's future life, and it is also the topic that uncles and aunts are most willing to discuss now, and it will never be out of date. In fact, this ranking table has no meaning. Whether it is high or low, it is matched according to the local actual situation. There is no distinction between good and bad. As long as everyone's pension is increasing, the final income is good.
2000 yuan, in addition to the above five provinces and cities, there are several coastal developed areas such as Guangdong, Shandong and Hainan, as well as northwest areas such as Tibet, Qinghai and Xinjiang, which have more financial transfer payments.
A large number of provinces and cities are below this average level, and more than half of them, including Fujian, Liaoning and other coastal provinces, have a per capita pension of less than 2,000 yuan.
For example, the lowest urban and rural endowment insurance in Guizhou Province is only 1.34 yuan every year, and the average monthly income is less than 1.20 yuan.
Urban and rural residents' pension expenditure mainly depends on local financial expenditure, and only by upgrading the economy can they have more funds to improve the welfare of urban and rural residents.
Rural elderly talents are the main group of the elderly in China at this stage, and they receive urban and rural residents' pensions together with a few elderly people who are not treated as urban workers. Therefore, we can't only see the high amount of pension for urban workers, but more importantly, the coverage of employee pension insurance in all elderly groups, thus fully reflecting the basic old-age security situation.