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Under China’s labor laws, terminating a China employee who has completed his or her probation period is virtually never easy. Termination usually requires good cause and a severance payment. Most importantly a China employer must be able to show that any unilateral termination was based on statutory grounds. In this post, I lay out some basic rules on terminating the labor contract with your China employees. Note that “China employees” essentially means any employee who works for your China-based company, whether that employee is actually a Chinese citizen or not.
The PRC Labor Contract Law permits employers to unilaterally terminate labor contracts without having to provide notice or economic compensation under one of the following circumstances:
Under one of the following circumstances, the employer may terminate the employee, but it must either give thirty days written notice or pay additional economic compensation equal to one month of the employee’s salary:
In addition, under the Labor Contract Law, an employer may terminate employees by initiating mass layoffs, provided conditions are met under the relevant laws and regulations.
If a China employee is wrongfully terminated (i.e., the employee is not terminated according to one of the statutory grounds), the employee may demand reinstatement of his or her position and the employer is required by law to give the employee his or her old job back. If the employee does not wish to continue working for the employer or if performance under the labor contract is not possible, then the employer must pay damages equal to double the economic compensation in the case of lawful termination. Note this is all very different from the U.S. employment law system.
Bottom line: Though your China employees can terminate the labor contract relatively easily (by providing thirty days written notice or three days notice during the probation period), you as the employer generally cannot terminate an employee without cause and a severance payment.
The post Terminating China Employees: The Basics appeared first on China Law Blog.
We will be discussing the practical aspects of Chinese law and how it impacts business there. We will be telling you what works and what does not and what you as a businessperson can do to use the law to your advantage. Our aim is to assist businesses already in China or planning to go into China, not to break new ground in legal theory or policy.