Deccan Chronicle

China flags down 12-hour, six-day work

- YINGZHI YANG & BRENDA GOH BEIJING, SEPT. 3

The Chinese government's campaign to improve conditions for workers has spurred companies, particular­ly some of its hardest-driving tech giants, to cut down on long hours of compulsory overtime but not all employees are happy about it.

Some employees at TikTok-owner ByteDance were shocked to find their August paychecks slashed 17 per cent after the company ended its policy of requiring its China-based staff to work a six-day week every second week.

"My workload hasn't actually changed," a product manager at ByteDance told Reuters, declining to be identified. "But unfortunat­ely the salary is lower."

For the past decade, Chinese tech firms were known for "996", a gruelling business culture that usually means work hours from 9 am to 9 pm for six days a week. But 996 was also seen as a badge of honour and was hailed as a competitiv­e advantage over US and European rivals.

It was also a guarantee of high pay as Chinese law stipulates that employees are entitled to double pay for working overtime on weekends and triple pay for public holidays.

Some workers in the tech sector began pushing back against 996 about two years ago --a movement that has gathered support from authoritie­s keen to promoting socialist values and workers rights as they push through with widerangin­g regulatory reforms. China's top court last month described 996 as illegal.

Other tech firms such as short-video platform

Kuaishou and food-delivery giant Meituan have also cut compulsory weekend overtime recently.

In another boon for workers rights, ride-hailing giant Didi Global and e-commerce powerhouse JD.com have set up government-backed unions in the past few weeks--a groundbrea­king developmen­t in the tech sector where organised labour has to date been very rare.

Authoritie­s are also working to mandate more breaks for workers, especially in the food delivery sector where companies have been accused of pushing drivers to make tight deadlines at the expense of safety.

Meituan has said it will introduce such breaks.

The southern city of Xiamen has also requested that companies implement a "20-minute break for every four hours of work" for delivery workers, the state-run People's Daily said this week.

Concerns remain though about unintended consequenc­es.

"Won't this restrict their earnings?" said one user on China's Twitter-like Weibo, citing how these drivers are paid per order. "This will cause more problems, won't they drive even faster to deliver?" said another.

Reduced pay could also spell trouble for staff retention and whether companies should be raising salaries to compensate workers.

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