China Daily

Home helpers in short supply this holiday

- By XIN WEN xinwen@chinadaily.com.cn

As Spring Festival approaches, many migrant workers have already left Beijing to return to their hometowns for family reunions, and this has left a major shortage in Beijing’s domestic helper market.

Wang Yan, a Beijing native, started to search for a housekeepe­r to take care of her senior father one and a half months before Spring Festival.

“Usually the caregiver that attended to my father would ask for leave before the holiday came, so I planned early to search for potential good fits,” said the 58-year-old.

“However, up to four housekeepi­ng companies that I’ve called said I should call them a week ahead of the Spring Festival and they couldn’t promise any,” she added, and was told domestic helpers themselves often made final travel plans much closer to the holiday itself.

“I finally gave up hope of finding one and asked my cousin for help to find a nanny to take care of my father.”

The high demand for housekeepe­rs has also been witfor nessed by domestic labor companies as well as a popular housekeepe­r service platform.

“About 95 percent of our housekeepe­rs returned home in the beginning of February,” said Zheng Hongzhong, general manager of Zhongsheng­meide, a housekeepi­ng company that assigns 11,000 housekeepe­rs in Beijing. “Since last week, the customer service line rang all day and we didn’t have enough housekeepe­rs to fill the demand.”

“It’s understand­able that housekeepe­rs want to go back home to have reunions with their families,” Zheng said.

Ayilaile, or “Here comes auntie”, is a domestic helper service platform with more than 100,000 registered housekeepe­rs online. There were only about 10,000 housekeepe­rs based in Beijing staying in the capital this Spring Festival, said Li Changze, a spokesman for Ayilaile.

Yin Xiaowei, a 48-year-old housekeepe­r, is among those who decided to stay in Beijing the festival care job.

Elderly care pays 200 yuan ($32) per day, and Yin expects to earn 3,600 yuan in total for the 15 days of work.

“The client offers twice that of normal days,” said Yin, originally from Qiqihar in Heilongjia­ng province. “This is because during the Spring Festival there is a high demand for housekeepe­rs.”

According to a report by the Ministry of Commerce, an estimated 25.4 million people worked in China’s domestic service industry in 2016, a rise of 9.3 percent compared with a year earlier.

Demand for domestic workers is massive in China and the industry is expected to reach 224 billion yuan in 2016. The service sector as a whole now contribute­s the largest portion to national economic developmen­t.

However, the uneven developmen­t between rural and urban areas has led to unstable developmen­t of the domestic helper industry as the mobility of migrant workers easily alters the workplace, according to the report. for an elderly

 ?? WEI TONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Domestic helper Cai Lianxiang works at a client’s house in Beijing earlier this month. She chose to stay in the capital to work during the holiday and will receive extra salary.
WEI TONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Domestic helper Cai Lianxiang works at a client’s house in Beijing earlier this month. She chose to stay in the capital to work during the holiday and will receive extra salary.

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