Employers will have to pay up to
double for delaying salaries, after a new regulation on employees'
rights takes effect Dec. 1, reported Shenzhen Daily.
The national regulation, which was
signed by Premier Wen Jiabao earlier this month and made public
Sunday, says that government authorities should set deadlines for
companies to pay back wages, and if the deadlines expire, the
companies must pay compensation of 50 to 100 percent of the due
wages to the employees, plus the wages.
If an employee's wage is lower than
the minimum wage, the employer should pay the difference, if it
failed to pay the difference by a deadline set by the government,
it must compensate the employee 50 to 100 percent of the
difference, says the regulation.
Meanwhile, if employers do not
compensate employees who are fired before completing the employment
contract, the employer must pay the employee an additional
compensation of 50 to 100 percent, says the regulation.
The regulation prohibits women
working in mines or pregnant women doing heavy manual work.
Employers must pay compensation of 1,000 yuan (US$122) to 5,000
yuan for each woman doing such work, says the regulation.
Companies should not require women
more than seven months pregnant or those feeding babies less than
one year old to work at night under penalty of 1,000 to 5,000 yuan
compensation for each of the women, says the regulation.
(Shenzhen Daily November
15, 2004)
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