The
Arbitration Law was bound to pale in comparison with the drama that accompanied
the recent drafting, passage and implementation of the “Employment Contracts
Law” (ECL, also called the “Labor Contract Law”): debates between foreign
businesses and labor groups, an unprecedented outpouring of public comment—over
190,000 responses in only a month—criticisms by entrepreneur-delegates to the
Chinese People’s Political Consultative Committee, and continued scandals
involving companies
trying to shirk their new
responsibilities to workers.
Besides being overshadowed by the Labor Contract Law, LDMAL
has disappointed some labor advocates in China. Most significantly, though the
law does not explicitly prohibit collective dispute arbitration (at least to my
understanding—readers who understand this better should comment), it only
mentions such cases by stating that groups of more than ten workers can choose
one representative to enter arbitration on their behalf (Article 7). But
as Global Labor Strategies notes, “
Recent
studies show that group labor disputes have been on the rise and now represent
roughly 60% of all workers involved in disputes.” According to Professor
Chang Kai, “If the law remains focused on solving individual labor disputes, in
10 years we will have many problems that cannot be solved under the current
legal system.”
Still, LDMAL does streamline the arbitration process. Its
Article 29 repeats the guarantee in the original arbitration legislation from
1994that an arbitration commission must respond to a request for arbitration
within five days, but adds that if a “
commission does not accept or
fails to make a decision within the time limit, the applicant may initiate
litigation to the people's court in respect of such labor dispute.
” Articles 30, 32, and 35 then lay out a series of five-day
deadlines for different steps in the arbitration process, culminating in
Article 43: “Where the arbitral tribunal makes an award to labor dispute
cases, it shall do so within 45 days of the acceptance of the arbitration
application by the labor dispute arbitration commission. If an extension is
required due to complexity of the case, an extension may be allowed with the
approval of the officer of labor dispute arbitration commission and the parties
shall be informed in writing, but the extension may not exceed 15 days.”
Importantly, plaintiffs also have a longer time frame for
bringing their cases to arbitration than in the past: one year “from the date
the parties know or shall have known the infringement of their rights” (Article
27) versus only 60 days under the old rules. As Aaron Halegua writes in a
forthcoming paper in The Berkeley Journal of International Law, “Workers rarely
take action after just one or two months of wages have been withheld, choosing
instead to maintain faith in employers who promise to pay them as soon as they
have the money”—but bringing their cases after a few months would be too late
under the old rules.
The
LDMAL declares arbitral decisions to be legally binding (Article 47). It makes
it easier for workers to file civil suits; they can go directly to court if the
arbitration committee does not issue a decision within 45 days or 60 days in
“complex” cases (Article 43again). Combined with the tougher enforcement
mechanisms of the ECL, particularly the ECL’s focus on compensation by
employers to employees for abuses rather than fines, the law ought to —if
faithfully implemented—push bosses along through a process that they once could
buck or amble their way through.
And
by setting up an essentially tri-partite dispute resolution mechanism, the
Arbitration Law moreover “further clarifies the role and obligations of the
union,” in the words of the All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU)-linked
newspaper Workers Daily (unfortunately, I cannot find the link for the original
article). Once again, the ACFTU has been handed an opportunity to prove its
commitment to reforming itself and more effectively representing workers.
Finally
and most importantly, the law does away with the old, onerous arbitration fees,
which had been the focus of large-scale petitions and that posed a significant
barrier to workers using legal channels to resolve grievances (though
arbitration committees were urged to waive fees for “economically troubled
workers,” Halegua notes that many committees required documentation from the
workers’ hometowns or their local labor union before granting a waiver—both of
which were difficult to obtain).
Will
the Arbitration Law solve everything? No, not by a long shot.
And it is
not the only avenue to resolving disputes. Halegua highlights the benefits to
workers of savvy NGOs who “possess the authority, tools and ability to persuade
employers to agree to mediate and to reach an agreement” away from the
pro-management biases of local government organs and the expenses of formally
launching cases—but with the mediator-NGOs holding at least some government
power. He uses the Beijing organization Little Bird as a case study; Little
Bird was given semi-official status when it was established as the “Little Bird
People’s Mediation Committee” of the Donghuamen Sub-District of Beijing in
2004.
But with
the new law, the number arbitration cases are bound to expand, for better or
worse. According to China Labor Bulletin, districts of Guangzhou City have seen
three to five-fold increases in arbitration cases just since the ECL went into
effect on January 1. I have heard from activists in Southern China that those
numbers will likely grow by multiples again as LDMAL is implemented and
arbitration fees are dropped.
The
question is: are we ready?