Wage Arrears Crisis Spreads in China; Employees Post Videos Pleading for Help

Wage Arrears Crisis Spreads in China; Employees Post Videos Pleading for Help

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China Unfolded
1 Video ViewĀ·Jul 31, 2025Ā Ā #ChinaUnfolded #WageArrearsChina #ChinaCrisis

"šŸ‡ØšŸ‡³ Wage Crisis in China – A Nation on the Edge of Social Unrest

A growing wave of wage arrears is sweeping across China — hitting construction workers, office employees, and even interns. Countless companies have defaulted on salaries and vanished, leaving workers no choice but to record videos pleading for help, or even dismantle the very structures they built in protest.

šŸ“ In provinces like Shandong, Guangdong, and Hainan, companies have been exposed for delaying wages for months. At a baby product factory in Foshan, employees revealed they were repeatedly promised payment ā€œnext monthā€ — but it never came.

A worker named Mr. Li in Guangzhou shared: ā€œI worked for three months and got nothing. I called the labor hotline, but all they said was ā€˜We’ll get back to you after verification’—and no one ever did.ā€

šŸ“‰ Even large public events haven’t escaped the crisis. At the International Beer Festival in Jinan, temporary workers were denied pay, and when they contacted the city hotline, their calls were refused. In Hainan, a decoration company disappeared after owing wages since before Chinese New Year.

šŸ”„ Tensions reached a breaking point at the ""Zhongjun World City Phase III"" construction site in Shandong, where furious workers ripped out steel bars and destroyed structures to protest long-term unpaid wages. Though videos were quickly removed from TikTok and Weibo, screenshots spread widely, igniting public outrage.

šŸ’¼ Interns aren’t spared either. A young accounting intern in Shanghai shared that her company refused to pay her 5,000-yuan salary, claiming the ā€œinternship agreementā€ didn’t constitute a labor relationship. After she spoke out, the company reportedly contacted her university to demand repayment and threatened to ruin her future job prospects.

šŸŽ“ Labor advocates warn that China’s vague legal definition of ā€œinternshipā€ allows companies to exploit students without pay or protection. Under financial pressure, many businesses cut wages first — and local governments often ignore the problem to attract investment. Left helpless, some workers resort to smashing completed projects as their only form of protest.

🦟 Meanwhile, a Chikungunya virus outbreak is spreading rapidly in Foshan, Guangdong, sparking fear of a return to lockdowns. Citizens are lining up for blood tests, and officials are rolling out foggers and ā€œmosquito-proof isolation beds,ā€ reminding many of the worst days of COVID-19. Some villages are even ordered to destroy crops and green belts in the name of epidemic control.

šŸ›ļø Abroad, while China faces turmoil, four young Chinese citizens protested for an entire week in front of the Chinese Consulate in Los Angeles. They denounced the Chinese Communist Party’s 26-year persecution of Falun Gong and its involvement in live organ harvesting. Once misled by CCP propaganda, they say discovering the truth pushed them to stand up for conscience and defend human rights.


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