Year of the Dog heralds shrinking bonuses for Chinese workers
Financial professionals took the biggest hit in 2017 as year-end bonuses more than halved from a year ago
The Year of the Dog may be barking less cheer for China’s white collar workers, who have received their lowest year-end bonuses in three years – despite a nearly 7 per cent increase in the country’s GDP.
The average year-end bonus for mainland Chinese workers reached 7,278 yuan (US$1,147) in 2017, compared with 12,821 yuan in 2016 and 10,767 yuan in 2015, according to a report by hiring website Zhilian Zhaopin, China’s equivalent of LinkedIn.
In China, year-end bonuses are a key indicator of the quality of jobs. Many companies pay employees a month’s salary or more as an extra welfare benefit, which is not required under the Chinese labour law.
Year-end bonuses, along with an individual’s marital status, have become topics of conversation over Lunar New Year banquets in recent years, as many parents use them to gauge the success level of their children.
Daisy Xia, a 30-year-old advertising industry executive in a southwestern Chinese city, said she felt that her 2017 year-end bonus was “much lower” compared with when she started working in 2010.
“I feel that in general, the overall economic environment is getting worse,” she said.