[OPE-L] China's Labour Law

From: Jurriaan Bendien (adsl675281@TISCALI.NL)
Date: Fri Jun 29 2007 - 17:23:55 EDT


(From China Labour Bulletin)

The Labour Contract Law approved by the Standing Committee of the National
People's Congress today is a laudable attempt to protect the rights of
individual workers.  The majority of workers in the private sector
(especially migrant workers) do not have any kind of contract with their
employer and as such are subject to whatever terms and conditions the
employer imposes. Management regularly (in violation of the existing Labour
Law) withholds wages, demands excessive overtime, and can dismiss workers
almost with impunity.

A great many migrant workers are not officially employed by the enterprise
they work for and only have contracts, valid for a few months, with a labour
supply or labour service company (see The True Story of Migrant Workers at
Dongfeng Auto).  Although these workers will remain formally employed by the
labour service company, the new law seeks to limit abusive practices by
eliminating short term contracts and giving supplied workers basically the
same rights as regular workers, including the right to join or organize a
trade union at their place of work.

The new law confirms that all individual workers have the right to negotiate
their own written employment contract with their employer, specifying terms,
conditions and benefits.  It enhances specific individual rights by
establishing a statutory probationary period for a fixed term contract,
improving heath and safety regulations, requiring redundancy payments to be
made after the termination of a contract, and generally making it more
difficult for employers to terminate contracts, especially those of long
serving workers.

Collective or Individual Rights?

Overall, the law tends to prioritize individual rights over collective
rights.  Nevertheless, it does allow workers' representatives to negotiate
collective (factory or workplace-wide) contracts through the official union
monopoly, the All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU), which is still a
permanent fixture in state-owned enterprises. And according to the final
draft of the law, in enterprises where the AFCTU has not established a
branch (and this includes the great majority of enterprises in the private
sector) workers may elect their own representatives to negotiate a
collective contract with management but only under the "direction" or
"guidance" (zhidao) of the ACFTU.  This represents a significant climb down
from provisions in the second draft of the new law which allowed workers
representatives to independently negotiate with management.

This revision is in the interests of the ACTFU, which has been steadily
losing its influence and becoming more anachronistic as the private sector
expands.  It also reflects the concerns voiced by foreign chambers of
commerce who (in CLB's view, unjustifiably) claimed the draft was too
restrictive and could lead to foreign companies moving operations out of
China.
In this regard, as in many others, foreign companies and the ACFTU are
natural allies.  The ACFTU and retail giant Wal-Mart famously went to war in
2004 over the right to set up union branches in its China stores.  Last
summer Wal-Mart capitulated and allowed the ACFTU to set up branches in all
its mainland stores.  But in reality Wal-Mart now benefits from having the
ACFTU in-house because the ACFTU, unlike a genuinely representative union,
is more interested in collecting its legally mandated two percent of monthly
payroll, than actually representing the fundamental rights and interests of
its members.

Workers need to be granted genuine freedom of association, not just the
"privilege" of joining the ACFTU. They should be given the right to strike,
and allowed to freely and democratically elect their own representatives who
can negotiate a collective and mutually beneficial contract with management,
without the interference of third party vested interests.

The need for legal enforcement

Above all, the contracts that are negotiated either collectively or
individually need to be legally enforced.  All too often in China, employers
can disregard the terms and conditions of the contracts they have signed
with their workers and impose their own terms and conditions as and when it
suits them.  And because workers have no genuine right of association, they
have little or no ability to fight back except through (effectively illegal)
strike action or other confrontational tactics that sometimes turn violent.
By contrast, if workers could organize genuine democratic unions, such
confrontational and disruptive disputes could mostly be solved through
negotiation and mutual compromise.

The resolution of protests

Everyday, there are large scale labour protests in towns and cities across
China, and it is difficult to see how the new Labour Contract Law can help
reduce such protests unless it is rigorously enforced and workers are given
the genuine right to collective bargaining.  Simply adding a new layer to
the existing labour legislation that is routinely ignored by employers and
not enforced by local authorities will not help protect labour rights, no
matter how laudable the new legislation may be.

Earlier this month, for example, several hundred workers at a shoe factory
in Dongguan, Guangdong Province, staged a highway blockade protesting low
wages, poor conditions and wage arrears.  The protest was broken up by over
a hundred riot police, leaving one worker badly injured.  The local
government labour bureau then colluded with management to dismiss 70 of the
protest organizers as a condition for the payment of back wages to the
remaining workers.  According to existing provisions in the 1994 Labour Law,
the company should have met the workers' demands for the legally mandated
minimum wage and overtime payments and had no right to sack the workers.
Moreover the company should have been legally sanctioned for promoting such
abuses of labour rights in the first place.
Unless, the government takes real steps to ensure the new Labour Contract
Law is properly enforced, it is unclear how it will help prevent similar
abuses in the future.

http://iso.china-labour.org.hk/public/contents/news?revision%5fid=46449&item%5fid=46445


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