Sunday Times

High price for a hard day’s night in China

- PATTI WALDMEIR

CHINA’s state media recently reported that 600 000 mainlander­s die every year from working too hard. Taken at face value, that would mean that 600 000 people a year face the same fate as may have befallen Moritz Erhardt, the Bank of America intern whose death in London last year — possibly caused by overwork — triggered an industry-wide crisis of conscience over whether Western bankers need to be more slothful.

Could it be true that more than half a million people are being worked to death each year in the service of Xi Jinping’s Chinese dream? Six hundred thousand is a lot of people to be keeling over in a single year — even in China, where statistics have to be pretty big to be important.

It might be wiser to think of it less of a statistic and more of a cri de coeur. No one knows what kinds of deaths are included in the 600 000, least of all the People’s Daily, which published it. But what is clear is that “occupation­al sudden death”, a term borrowed from the Japanese, has become a big social problem among China’s exhausted workforce.

Xinhua, the state news agency, reported last year that almost 1 100 police officers had died of overwork in the previous five years — fully half of those who died in the line of duty. What it did not say is that a big part of the problem was being drunk in the line of duty.

Alcohol seems to play a big part in many so-called overwork deaths, because many employees are expected to spend long hours entertaini­ng clients or government officials, often lubricated by alcohol.

And it is not just that the average wage slave is working so hard these days — slavery is not paying off like it used to. The average Chinese workaholic can pull as many allnighter­s as he likes, but it will not get him a foot on even the lowest rungs of the property ladder in Shanghai or Beijing. And his girlfriend will not marry him until he can buy a flat.

As China’s leaders met this week in Beijing for sessions of the coun- try’s mock legislatur­e, they might not have counted the exact death toll from overwork — but they would have counted the political costs of a property market that makes a mockery of those who work for a living.

Indeed, modern urban Chinese seem to be increasing­ly worried about the price they pay for the Asian work ethic. According to a report published last week by Boston Consulting Group, half of those surveyed — from the middle to affluent classes — said they had health problems because of “work pressures, family obligation­s and long work hours”.

Insomnia, fatigue, obesity, a lack of energy, frequent illness — all the diseases familiar to any Western workaholic, but not the kind of thing to worry anyone much in the first few decades after communism.

Informatio­n technology workers are apparently especially vulnerable: one recent survey of 350 000 IT workers found that 98.8% of them said they had health problems.

And it is not just server slaves who are suffering. The death of Shinian Xueluo highlighte­d the problem of overwork fatalities among, of all things, online novelists. He died in June after writing 1.6 million words of a novel he was rushing to complete to earn money to put his younger sister through school.

Wei Ziwei, 24, has to write 100 000 words a month as part of her contract as an online novelist. She says she would ideally prefer to write at midnight. But after hearing about many cases of novelists succumbing to overwork, Wei changed her schedule to work only eight hours a day, during daytime — not counting mental health breaks to do housework.

Over the next few years, overwork will doubtless fall out of fashion in China, just as the urban birth rate has dropped (even in areas where couples are allowed to bear more than one child they often do not want to) and China’s appetite for bling has abated — all natural casualties of rising prosperity.

Until that happens, China’s insurance groups have stepped in to bridge the gap, because sudden deaths from overwork are often excluded from accident insurance policies in China.

Worried workaholic­s can buy a “pressure as big as a mountain” insurance policy on Taobao, the Chinese version of eBay. For roughly $10 (about R106) a year, those aged between 20 and 30 can get $80 000 in coverage against sudden death from overwork.

It is cheap at the price — and a whole lot easier than learning how to enjoy a good day’s indolence. © The Financial Times, London

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa