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Letter from the Editors
Lately, the Chinese government passed new legislation laying out a plan to delay the retirement age over the course of 15 years, starting from 1 January, 2025. In general, the current statutory retirement age for male employees is 60 years old, and the retirement age for female employees who are classified as managers is 55 years old.
Extending workers’ retirement age is likely to increase competition in the labour market as more workers are compelled to work before they can receive their pension payment. This will happen in an environment where young workers are struggling for jobs. This month, youth unemployment (ages 16-24 and not in school) reached 18.8%, up from 17.1%, marking the highest rate this year. This rise is likely tied to factory closures and relocations, raising concerns over severance pay and labour rights violations.
Besides challenges faced by workers in the labour market, China Labour Bulletin released an extensive report Unprotected yet Unyielding: The Decade-Long Protest of China’s Healthcare Workers (2013-2023). It documents the last ten years of healthcare workers’ rights violations, taking a case-based approach to understanding how workers have been owed wages, overworked, treated unequally, suffered from unsafe working conditions and ultimately unheard and not well represented. Download the full report as a PDF here.
Thanks for reading!
CLB editors