Severance Payment for Termination of Employment in China

According to the provisions of the Labor Contract Law of PRC, employers are required to pay compensation to employees under the following situations:

(1) In situations specified in Article 38, Section 1 of the Labor Contract Law, where the employee terminates the labor contract, the employer shall pay compensation: I

1.The employer fails to provide labor protection or working conditions as agreed in the labor contract.

2.The employer fails to pay labor remuneration in a timely and full manner.

3.The employer fails to lawfully contribute to social insurance premiums for the employee.

4.The employer’s rules and regulations violate laws and regulations, causing harm to the rights of the employee.

5.The employer uses deception, coercion, or takes advantage of the employee’s vulnerability to enter into or modify the labor contract against the true intent, rendering the contract invalid.    

6.The employer exempts itself from legal responsibilities or excludes the rights of the employee, rendering the labor contract invalid.

7.The employer enters into a labor contract in violation of mandatory provisions of laws and administrative regulations, rendering the contract invalid.

8.The employer uses violence, threats, or illegal restrictions on personal freedom to force labor.

9.The employer issues illegal commands, forces risky operations, and endangers the personal safety of the employee.

10.Payment of wages to employees below the local minimum wage standards. (Interpretation of the Supreme People’s Court on Several Issues Concerning the Application of Law in the Trial of Labor Dispute Cases, Article 15)

(2) When the employer terminates the labor contract, compensation shall be paid to the employee:

1.As stipulated in Article 36 of the Labor Contract Law, the employer proposes and both parties negotiate the termination of the labor contract.    

2.In situations specified in Article 40 of the Labor Contract Law, where the employer terminates the labor contract:

a) The employee is sick or non-work-related injured, unable to engage in the original work after the prescribed medical period, and cannot be reassigned by the employer.

b) The employee is incapable of performing the work, even after training or adjusting the job position.

c) The objective circumstances on which the labor contract was based have undergone significant changes, making it impossible to perform the contract. After negotiation between the employer and the employee, no agreement is reached on changing the content of the labor contract.

3.In situations specified in Article 41, Section 1 of the Labor Contract Law:

a) The employer undergoes reorganization according to the regulations on enterprise bankruptcy, leading to personnel reductions.

b) The employer faces serious difficulties in production and operation, leading to personnel reductions.

c) The enterprise undergoes restructuring, major technological innovation, or business adjustment, requiring personnel reductions.    

d) Other significant changes in objective economic conditions relied upon at the time of concluding the labor contract, making the labor contract impossible to perform.

(3) When terminating the labor contract, compensation shall be paid to the employee (as specified in Article 44 of the Labor Contract Law):

1.The labor contract expires, and the employer terminates the fixed-term labor contract because the employee agrees to renew it but the employer does not.

2.The labor contract is terminated because the employer is legally declared bankrupt.

3.The labor contract is terminated because the employer’s business license is revoked, ordered to close, revoked, or the employer decides to dissolve in advance.

In addition, the determination of the wage in the severance payment  is specified in Article 47 of the Labor Contract Law. After the termination or rescission of the labor contract, the employer should pay compensation to the employee based on the employee’s years of service in the company, one month’s salary for each full year of service.    

For service periods of more than six months but less than one year, it is calculated as one year; and for periods of less than six months, half a month’s salary is paid as economic compensation.

The “wage” in the Labor Contract Law refers to the labor remuneration directly paid to the employee by the employer in monetary form, based on relevant national regulations or the agreement in the labor contract.

This generally includes hourly wages, piece-rate wages, bonuses, allowances, subsidies, and overtime pay, as well as wages paid under special circumstances. In practice, an employee’s wages typically consist of basic wages, payable wages, and actual wages. Basic wages are usually the minimum salary set by the employer for the employee, generally excluding overtime pay, allowances, subsidies, and welfare benefits. Payable wages refer to the total wages that the employee is entitled to according to legal regulations, including basic wages, overtime pay, bonuses, and allowances. Actual wages are the amount the employee actually receives each month, usually reduced by some expenses such as social insurance contributions, income tax, meal fees, and rent. The calculation compensation should be based on the employee’s payable wages, not basic wages or actual wages.    

The Implementation Regulations of the Labor Contract Law, Article 27, stipulate that the monthly wage for economic compensation under Article 47 of the Labor Contract Law is calculated based on the employee’s entitled wages, including monetary income such as hourly wages or piece-rate wages, as well as bonuses, allowances, and subsidies.

If the employee’s average wage in the 12 months before the termination or rescission of the labor contract is lower than the local minimum wage standard, it should be calculated based on the local minimum wage standard. For employees who have worked for less than 12 months, the average wage should be calculated based on the actual number of months worked.   

employment law
Is Office Camera Installation a Violation of Employee Privacy?

Related Posts