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Charles Shen, Senior Partner

Shanghai Puruo Law Offices

17701602717(WhatsApp)

attorneys.sh@gmail.com

25/F, Sino Life Tower
No. 707 Zhangyang Road
200120 Shanghai,P.R.China

 
Litigation & Arbitration
Ten Things To Be Considered When Drafting China Labor Contracts
发布日期:2012-01-11 15:56:39
 

The Chinese employment system is based on Asian socialist and Northern European models. China's employment law system is quite different from the U.S system. The main difference is that the U.S. is an employment at will system, which means you can terminate employees at any time for pretty much any reason. China's system is the opposite. The Chinese system is a contract employment system. This means all employees must be engaged pursuant to a written employment contract and during the term of that contract, it is very difficult to terminate an employee. An employee can only be terminated for cause and cause must be clearly proved. This means the employer must maintain a detailed set of rules and regulations and must maintain careful discipline records to be able to establish grounds for dismissal. This whole situation makes the employment relationship and the employment documents much more adversarial than is customary in the U.S. You will find that the "tone" of the documents I am sending you is not consistent with your normal "team" approach to dealing with employment issues.

China does not really have the concept of a "salaried" employee. The Chinese work week is 40 hours and overtime must be paid for work exceeding the 40 hour limit. I know this approach is very foreign to software/service businesses. However, there are no exceptions to this rule.

Please consider the following issues:

1. Term of employment. As noted above, each employee must be hired pursuant to the terms of a written contract. After the initial contract term expires, you may re-hire the employee pursuant to a second fixed term contract. However, at the end of that fixed term the employee automatically will be converted into a employee with an open contract term. This means you have only one chance to hire an employee on a fixed term basis.

Due to the above considerations, determining the length of the initial employment term is critical. We recommend an initial term of three years. This has two benefits. First, it allows you to provide a six month probationary period, during which time you can terminate an employee for any reason. This gives adequate time to test the basic skills of an employee. Second, it delays the onset of the open term period for a period long enough to allow you to determine whether you wish to allow an employee to convert to the open term status.

Of course, you are free to specify any term you feel is appropriate.

2. Salary. You will need to provide a salary, of course. We will then need to convert that into an hourly wage.

One issue here is that in many parts of China, it is customary to pay the salary on a 13 month basis, with the final month paid just prior to the Chinese New Year. This is completely optional, but it is important to state clearly whether or not you will be using this approach. Many employees just expect this "New Year's Bonus" and a failure to pay it (if expected) can cause many problems.

3. Bonus. If you plan to have a bonus system for your employees, we should set this out.

4. Vacation. The statutory rule on vacation for employees is as follows:

First year: No vacation.
Years 2 through 9: 5 days.
Years 10 through 19: 10 days
20 years or more: 15 days.

If you want to provide more vacation time than set forth above, we will need to specify.

5. Other benefits. If you plan to provide benefits beyond the statutory minimum (set out in the rules and regulations provided), we will need to specify that. If you want to provide a particular benefit to all of your employees, we should put it in your rules and regulations. If you want to provide employee specific benefits, we will include them in the specific employment contract.

For example, China requires employees pay a portion of the employment taxes/fees. Some employers pay that portion for the employee as an additional benefit.

6. On site security.  the Rules and Regulations should have a detailed section regarding on site security.

7. Travel. If your employees will travel domestically or internationally, you should have a written travel expense policy.

8. Trade Secrets/IP Protection.

9. Training. Will you be providing training for your employees? If yes, we should also develop a training agreement.

10. Sign Off Agreement. With this agreement, the employee acknowledges having received the rules and regulations and agrees to abide by those rules. It is important to get your employees to sign this so they cannot later claim not to have received it, which claim is frequently made at labor arbitration in China.


By Steve Dickinson
Source: ChinaLawBlog


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