Labor disputes jumped 30 percent in the first half of this year,
the Shanghai Labor and Social Security Bureau said Monday.
More than 9,000 cases were filed in the first half. Among them,
3,500-plus cases involved employees of private and foreign-invested
companies. Disputes involving stockholding companies saw the
biggest surge at 38 percent, or 1,200 cases, officials said.
"As many private companies or joint ventures were just starting up,
the ignorance or disregard of labor laws directly led to the
mounting number of disputes," said Sui Wei, vice director at the
bureau's arbitrary division.
Among the 8,500 cases arbitrated this year, 85 percent were won by
employees.
"That implies that employees now have a better awareness of their
rights, which is also another reason for the dispute increase," Sui
said.
Most cases tend to focus on business or economic disputes - such as
commercial confidentiality or patent-related issues - rather than
the previous focus on payment delay, overtime work or use of
unregistered employees.
The Labor and Social Security Bureau provided one example. A
university graduate surnamed Li filed for arbitration with his
former employer, a foreign-invested company, over business
confidentiality.
As the company's product designer, Li signed a business
confidentiality pact included in his five-year contract.
It stated that he could not run a business in the same sector or
work for the company's competitors within three years of
termination.
But the company agreed to pay Li a "business confidentiality
allowance" if they terminated the contract, Li told arbitrators.
However, the company failed to keep its promise after Li resigned.
Li took a new job in the same position at a competitor. The
original company insisted that Li violated the agreement first.
The arbitrator ruled that Li could continue working at the second
position.
Sui also said bureau hired 13 lawyers and law scholars to work as
part-time arbitrators this month, and they would be responsible for
three to five cases every year.
(Shanghai Daily July 20, 2004)
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