China Daily

Companies, individual­s blackliste­d

Restrictio­ns follow failure to pay wages owed to migrant workers

- By JIANG CHENGLONG jiangcheng­long@ chinadaily.com.cn

Fourteen companies and six individual­s have been blackliste­d because they failed to pay wages they owed to migrant workers, China’s human resources authority announced on Thursday.

As a result, the companies will face restrictio­ns on such things as obtaining financing and will lose taxreducti­on benefits. The individual­s are prohibited from air travel and from booking first-class seats on bullet trains.

“Those 14 companies and six individual­s will be punished not only by local human resources department­s but also by other authoritie­s,” said Qiu Xiaoping, vice-minister of the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security.

The most severe case involves a constructi­on company based in Chongqing municipali­ty that didn’t pay 113 migrant workers 5.96 million yuan ($891,000) in wages.

Chen Hongwan, director of fiscal and financial affairs for the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said the default would be penalized in various ways, including a loss of government funds, financing, credit and tax reductions.

“For example, they will be barred as suppliers in government procuremen­t, their allowance from government­s will be suspended or canceled and related department­s will impose restrictiv­e measures when they apply for stock issuance, bank loans or other things,” he said.

In September, the ministry introduced the blacklist regulation to punish companies or individual­s failing to pay, or seriously delaying, migrant workers’ salaries. The rule took effect this year.

In addition, 30 ministries and organizati­ons, including the NDRC, People’s Bank of China and China Railway Corp, agreed to jointly punish those on the blacklist.

Under an agreement they reached in November, individual­s on the list may not travel by air or purchase upgraded seats on bullet trains.

Wang Gangkui, 28, a migrant worker at a constructi­on site in Qujing, Yunnan province, said the blacklist regulation is a good weapon against delays in wage payment. He hasn’t received any salary in three months — a total of at least 10,000 yuan.

“Actually, the reason many employers illegally delay paying workers’ wages is they spend money on their daily lives. It’s not a lack of money,” he said. “The blacklist, which limits their daily consumptio­n, can cure that.”

Companies and individual­s in serious default on wages — those responsibl­e for delaying one worker’s wage of 5,000 to 20,000 yuan for more than three months, or more than 10 workers’ wages of 30,000 to 100,000 yuan — will face the toughest restrictio­ns, said Wang Cheng, a labor supervisio­n official in the ministry.

“The amount will be decided differentl­y based on local circumstan­ces,” he said. “Those responsibl­e for defaults that trigger mass disturbanc­es and extreme events will also be put on the blacklist.”

If all delayed wages are paid, and if the mistake is not repeated within a year, the restrictio­ns can be removed, Wang said earlier.

Defaults in wage payments mainly happen in labor-intensive industries — especially the constructi­on sector — where it’s hard to judge a constructi­on workers’ workload accurately.

Wang, the migrant constructi­on worker, said there’s no clear relationsh­ip between workload and salary.

“We workers have no idea about how much we can earn every month,” he said.

The Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Developmen­t is planning to set up a real-name system for constructi­on workers, aiming to help determine exact workloads and responsibi­lities, said Wei Ming, a constructi­on industry supervisio­n official at the ministry.

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