China’s fairly recent implementation of a social security insurance scheme that includes foreign workers has generated unintended uncertainties and inconsistencies both for foreign companies in China and for Chinese companies working outside China, without generating clear benefits for foreign workers. This Note provides an overview of the new scheme, which requires, for the first time, all foreign workers and their employers to pay into the social security insurance system. Weaknesses in this new scheme include inconsistent implementation, scattered timelines, and incomplete information on coverage. In the face of these and other shortcomings, China should focus on the benefits of reciprocity and totalization by implementing more bilateral...
The concept of “migrant workers” derives from the household registration system of China’s planned e...
The concept of “migrant workers” derives from the household registration system of China’s planned e...
Due to the rapid industrialization and urbanization of China, an estimated 252 million farmers have ...
China’s fairly recent implementation of a social security insurance scheme that includes foreign wor...
This article analyses China's new Social Insurance Law and its treatment of foreigners in an interna...
In This Issue: Social Insurance Updates: Compliance Rates Remain Low and China–Netherlands Social ...
The phenomenal success of China's market-oriented economic reforms since the 1980s has rendered the ...
Rural-to-urban migration has increased rapidly in China since the early 1980s, with the number of mi...
Social security law in for further horse-trading “Grey income”: hidden face of inequalitie
In This Issue: China Makes Two Major Moves in Its Social Insurance System Government Announces Pol...
This paper outlines the history of social insurance policies and coverage in urban China, and uses a...
China’s welfare regime has been historically characterized by its structural arrangement, distingui...
Traditionally, benefits payable for occupational injury or disease in China were only available from...
[Excerpt] As of October 15, 2011, all foreign nationals working in China under a work permit must pa...
Over the past decade, the PRC has made dramatic changes to its labor contract laws, corporate laws, ...
The concept of “migrant workers” derives from the household registration system of China’s planned e...
The concept of “migrant workers” derives from the household registration system of China’s planned e...
Due to the rapid industrialization and urbanization of China, an estimated 252 million farmers have ...
China’s fairly recent implementation of a social security insurance scheme that includes foreign wor...
This article analyses China's new Social Insurance Law and its treatment of foreigners in an interna...
In This Issue: Social Insurance Updates: Compliance Rates Remain Low and China–Netherlands Social ...
The phenomenal success of China's market-oriented economic reforms since the 1980s has rendered the ...
Rural-to-urban migration has increased rapidly in China since the early 1980s, with the number of mi...
Social security law in for further horse-trading “Grey income”: hidden face of inequalitie
In This Issue: China Makes Two Major Moves in Its Social Insurance System Government Announces Pol...
This paper outlines the history of social insurance policies and coverage in urban China, and uses a...
China’s welfare regime has been historically characterized by its structural arrangement, distingui...
Traditionally, benefits payable for occupational injury or disease in China were only available from...
[Excerpt] As of October 15, 2011, all foreign nationals working in China under a work permit must pa...
Over the past decade, the PRC has made dramatic changes to its labor contract laws, corporate laws, ...
The concept of “migrant workers” derives from the household registration system of China’s planned e...
The concept of “migrant workers” derives from the household registration system of China’s planned e...
Due to the rapid industrialization and urbanization of China, an estimated 252 million farmers have ...