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New labor law means better image but at higher cost
BEIJING—Will China’s new labor
contract law mean a better image and a move up the industrial ladder? Or
will it push up wages and erode the country’s competitive advantage? And
among these possible outcomes, which matters more? It depends on who you
ask.
Zhao Yumin, an expert with the Chinese Academy of International Trade
and Economic Cooperation, which is under the Ministry of Commerce, told
Xinhua that China should shed its sweatshop image. “We will develop the
economy with the purpose of promoting people’s welfare and the new law
aims to ensure that workers’ rights are protected,” in line with world
trends. The Labor Contract Law, due to take effect on Jan. 1, 2008,
entitles employees of at least 10 years’ standing to sign contracts that
protect them from dismissed without cause. The law also requires
employers to contribute to employees’ social security accounts and sets
wage standards for employees on probation and working overtime.
Many small local companies complained that the law would send up their
costs and worsen their situation, which they said was already being made
difficult by a stronger currency and the scrapping of export tax
rebates. However, Chen Xinmin, a human resources expert with South China
Normal University, said that “some companies reacted too strongly
because they are so spoiled that they mistakenly equate advanced
personnel management with the right to fire people at will.”
Statistics indicate that about 40 percent of private-sector employees
lack labor contracts, and critics have charged that unpaid wages, forced
labor and other abuses have accompanied China’s economic boom. The
outcry culminated in June when a slave-labor scandal came to light in
which hundreds of farmers, teenagers and even children had been forced
to work in brickyards, enduring beatings and confinement. “Companies
should regard the law as an opportunity to improve their management,
capital-labor relations and productivity,” said Bao Yujun, president of
the China Society of Private Economy Research.
“Foreign companies reject poor labor standards, too,” said Zhao, adding
that she didn’t believe the law would lead to multinationals moving
their operations out of China to countries where labor costs were even
lower.—Xinhua |