Friday 30 April 2021

Chinese Regulators Prepare to Take Action Against More Tech Companies

After levying a record-breaking fine against Alibaba and requiring sweeping structural changes to Ant Group’s business earlier this month, Chinese regulators are showing no signs of letting up in their crackdown on big tech. Several news outlets reported this week on looming fines and regulatory overhauls at companies including Tencent, ByteDance, JD.com and others. On Thursday, the Wall Street Journal’s Lingling Wei and Stephanie Yang reported that China’s central bank had ordered 13 tech companies to follow much tighter rules relating to their use of big data in extending loans to consumers:

China is reining in the ability of the country’s internet giants to use big data for lending, money-management and similar businesses, ending an era of rapid growth that authorities said posed dangers for the financial system.

[…] Their aim, say analysts, is to curb a revolutionary business model that let China’s Big Tech develop and use powerful payment apps and other information about hundreds of millions of users.

[…] Under the guidelines regulators released Thursday, the tech firms must “disconnect the improper connection between payment tools and other financial products.” The vague language indicates that the ability for the firms to channel funds from their payment apps into lending and money-management activities would be severely curtailed.

[…] Regulators also want to limit the use of the payment apps by the corporate sector, which could significantly hurt the growth of the tech firms’ payment business. In addition, by trying to break what the central-bank statement calls control over data, the People’s Bank of China signaled its intention to get the tech giants to share their troves of consumer-credit data. [Source]

The central bank’s demand that companies disaggregate payment tools and other financial products is a significant one. Many tech companies, from food delivery service Meituan to ride-hailing service Didi Chuxing, not to mention the two e-payment behemoths WeChat Pay and Alipay, have bundled loan services into their apps, virtually drowning users in offers for loans. As the Wall Street Journal’s Keith Zhai explained, the requirement that many companies no longer offer financial services beyond payments will force a major re-engineering of these apps: 

Regulators’ push to delink the technology companies’ broader suites of financial products and services from their core payments platforms, if carried out, would deal a blow to a lucrative business model pioneered most successfully by Ant Group Co., the financial-services giant controlled by billionaire entrepreneur Jack Ma.

“In the past, payment was the end of all transactions, but now payment has become the beginning of all transactions,” Ant’s then-chief executive Simon Hu told Chinese media last year.

[…] Ant’s Alipay mobile app, which started out as a basic payments platform, has branched out to provide other services to its more than one billion users. One of its most popular features has been its microloans service, accounting for nearly 40% of total sales in the first half of 2020, according to the company.

[…] Ant is discussing with regulators the possibility of transferring some of its app-based financial services to another of its apps, called Ant Fortune, which has lain dormant for years—barely updated since the company decided to merge most of its functions into Alipay, the two people said. [Source]

While the new rules about in-app financial services are set to affect a range of companies, particular attention is being focused on Tencent by China’s market regulator. This week, Reuters’ Pei Li and Julie Zhu reported that the State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) was preparing a landmark fine against the company for failing to report past acquisitions and investments:

Tencent should expect a penalty of at least 10 billion yuan ($1.54 billion), significant enough for the State Administration of Market Regulation (SAMR) to make an example of it, both people said.

[…] SAMR’s investigation partly focuses on Tencent Music Entertainment Group (TME.N), which was spun off and listed in the United States in late 2018, two of the people and an additional two sources close to the business said. Tencent Music Entertainment did not immediately respond to request for comment.

The regulator has informed Tencent that it should expect a fine, give up exclusive music rights, and may even be forced to sell the acquired Kuwo and Kugou music apps, said the people.

However, Tencent’s core businesses, video games and WeChat, are likely to remain intact, said one of the people. [Source]

Amid the slew of fines and regulatory orders, it has become clear that what started with a crackdown on Jack Ma’s business empire has quickly expanded to become a turning point for the broader tech industry in China. Earlier this month, The Economist analysed the implications of the Chinese government’s tightening grasp over the tech sector:

[China’s tech moguls] and their shareholders, who include plenty of Western funds, are grappling with three poorly understood developments. After years of tolerating big tech’s unbridled expansion, the central government is rewriting the rules, some tacit and some explicit, for how billionaires can behave, the degree of overt state control over data, and who owns the firms’ other assets, including stakes in other businesses. This new master plan for Chinese big tech will transform one of the world’s most innovative and valuable industries.

[…] A second set of questions concerns the government’s designs for the firms’ most valuable resource—data. Its objective is to pool data and impose more state ownership and control, which could eventually amount to a kind of nationalisation. The digital firms have built some of the world’s largest and most advanced databases, which assess everything from users’ loan repayments to their friend networks, travel histories and spending habits. Ant alone is said to hold data on more than a billion people, on a par with Facebook and Google. Because of the breadth of services that many Chinese “super-apps” encompass, they have an even richer picture of users. [Source]



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/04/chinese-regulators-prepare-to-take-action-against-more-tech-companies/

Netizen Voices: “As Soon as They Want to Access Your Uterus, They Start the Sweet Talk”

The Financial Times this week reported that China’s seventh national census would show the country’s population declined for the first time in decades. The government bureau responsible for the census then claimed China’s population increased in 2020—but has yet to publish the report, which was originally set to be released in early April. Total population numbers aside, the report is expected to show a significant decrease in China’s birth rate. Only 100,368 children were born in Beijing in 2020, compared with 132,634 in 2019, a drop off of 32,266 births. The aggregate numbers hide the extent of the problem: China’s gender ratio is 112 boys per 100 girls. This startling imbalance is largely the result of sex-selective abortion and other practices under the one-child policy, which was revised in 2015.

The general decline in fertility is not simply a casualty of the pandemic, but also a reflection of women’s categorical rejection of government efforts to persuade them to marry and have children—for example, a new divorce “cooling-off period” that endangers women caught in abusive relationships. Some Chinese feminists have adopted a South Korean tactic known as 6B4T which rejects heterosexual marriage and procreation. “6B4T is a passive way of resistance and self-protection under the current gender equality situation in East Asia,” a young Guangdong woman told VICE. Earlier this month, authorities targeted 6B4T adherents in a crackdown on feminist Douban groups that met with netizen resistance. Elsewhere on social media, “trolls” have targeted feminists for harassment as Weibo’s CEO egged them on.

This served as the background for the publication of a recent report on human trafficking in China which led to an online maelstrom. A Weibo account for China News Service, the second-largest state owned news agency in China, shared the report with a hashtag taken from the text: “Eliminate Backward Concepts Like ‘Men Are Superior To Women’ and ‘Beget Male Heirs To Carry On The Ancestral Lineage.’” In response, some online commenters argued that the hashtag and state media comment underscore the lack of progress on gender rights since the 1949 founding of the PRC. CDT Chinese editors collected a number of comments from across the web, a selection of which have been translated here:

0THIRD01:As soon as they want access to your uterus, they start sweet-talking you. Bear in mind that the divorce “cool-off period” started not so long ago!!

丫丫酱团纸Back in the year I graduated, even the PSB’s campus recruiting material didn’t dare openly write “we only recruit males”—at most they only hinted that they don’t recruit women. But in recent years? All sorts of classifieds openly write “we only recruit males.” Gender discrimination will soon become the national norm. But now they’re once again thinking about gender equality, could it be that the 7th Census has given them a slap in the face?

十里酒街: When I was little my parents favored boys over girls. It’s shadowed my entire life.

朱小姐不爱吃鱼虾: How will you eliminate the mindset that “men are superior to women”? Can an ideology thousands of years old be erased so easily? It’s practically carved into Chinese peoples’ bones. Better to address the difficulty women have getting hired first. If two years after graduation you want to change jobs, the first thing they’ll ask you is, “Do you have a boyfriend? When do you plan to get married?” If you’re already married but don’t have kids, they won’t hire you. If you have one, they’ll ask if you plan to have a second. If you don’t plan for a second, they’ll want to see the receipt payment for an IUD as proof of your commitment.

Chan-_Chan: Is there equal pay for equal work? Equal opportunity and equal employment? Could the divorce “cool-down period” be binned first?

我在苏菲的信箱里: Women’s position in China is the best in the world, China News Service is a hostile foreign force. [Chinese]

Other archived comments show netizens highlighting the fact that the call for gender equality was first sounded long ago by sharing historical factoids, or lampooning the anachronism with cartoons:

-叮当叮叮当:HAHA almost a hundred years have already passed:

[Translated from screenshot:] In June 1923, the Third National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party was held in Guangzhou. A bill drafted by Xiang Jingyu and passed at the Congress, “The Resolution on The Women’s Movement,” clearly stated: “Women should have inheritance rights,” “Freedom of relations between men and women,” “Marriage and divorce freedom,” “Equal pay across genders,” “Protections for mothers,” “Subsidies for women laborer comrades,” “Equal education across genders,” “Equal employment across genders,” and a number of other regulations related to equal gender rights and the protection of women’s rights. The bill also proposed a National Alliance for the Women’s Movement. Xiang Jingyu was elected to the Central Committee and became the first Party Secretary of the Women’s Movement. [Chinese]

Original Chinese version of cartoon.

Leta Hong Fincher wrote this week’s Politico China Watcher newsletter on China’s feminists and the state’s attempt to increase fertility:

In his International Women’s Day address this year, Xi emphasized the importance of women’s reproductive function. “Without women, there would be no continuity of the human race,” he said. But a critical mass of women are rejecting the state’s relentless promotion of marriage and child rearing, The Wall Street Journal reported.

[…] Women who had previously avoided political discussion now decided to identify themselves publicly as feminists on social media, forcing the government’s internet censors to work even more aggressively to shut down new feminist content. In January 2018, thousands of students and alumni in China signed #MeToo petitions at dozens of universities across China, demanding action against sexual harassment. Many of the petitions were deleted by censors soon after being posted, but users came up with ideas to evade the censorship, including the use of emojis for “rice” (mi) and “rabbit” (tu) to make the hashtag #RiceBunny — which sounds like “Me Too” in Mandarin.

[…] Although Chinese feminist activists eschew the appearance of overt political opposition, their underlying message is radical. By mobilizing women to break free of China’s patriarchal institutions of compulsory marriage and child rearing, feminists are sabotaging the government’s fundamental objectives of ensuring that “high-quality,” Han Chinese women remain baby breeders and docile guarantors of political stability. [Source]

See also CDT’s 2019  interview with Leta Hong Fincher. For further reading, turn to digital news magazine Wainao’s collection of interviews and articles on Chinese feminism in the 2010s, “the erased decade” in the magazine’s terms.



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/04/netizen-voices-as-soon-as-they-want-to-access-your-uterus-they-start-the-sweet-talk/

POLITICO – Feminists thwarting China’s population goals



source https://www.politico.com/newsletters/politico-china-watcher/2021/04/29/feminists-in-china-thwarting-governments-population-planning-objectives-492643#new_tab

Forum 2000 – Xiao Qiang: Digital authoritarianism in China undermines democratic values



source https://www.forum2000.cz/en/news/digital-authoritarianism-in-china-undermines-democratic-values-forum2000online#new_tab

Tuesday 27 April 2021

Photo: Tsinghua University Art Museum, by Scott Chu

Tsinghua University Art Museum, by Scott Chu (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/04/photo-tsinghua-university-art-museum-by-scott-chu/

China’s Population May Have Shrunk for First Time Since Great Leap Forward (Updated)

Updated at 21:21:47 PDT on Apr 27, 2021: This post has been updated to note doubts about the reportedly looming census figures.

The latest Chinese census may reveal that China’s population has shrunk for the first time in over fifty years, according to a report by The Financial Times. The census results, which were originally expected to be released this month but have been delayed, are expected to show that China’s population has dipped below 1.4 billion, two years after it reportedly reached that mark. The Financial Times’ Sun Yu reported on the leaked results and their implications:

The latest Chinese census, which was completed in December but has yet to be made public, is expected to report the total population of the country at less than 1.4bn, according to people familiar with the research. In 2019, China’s population was reported to have exceeded the 1.4bn mark.

The people cautioned, however, that the figure was considered very sensitive and would not be released until multiple government departments had reached a consensus on the data and its implications.

[…] China’s birth rates have weakened even after Beijing relaxed its decades-long family planning policy in 2015, allowing all couples to have two children instead of one. The population expanded under the one-child policy introduced in the late 1970s, thanks to a bulging population of young people in the aftermath of the Communist revolution as well as increased life expectancy. [Source]

The Economist’s Simon Rabinovitch noted that the turning point may not have arrived yet after all, though “the trends are clear” in that direction:

Signs of a major slowdown in China’s population growth have been evident for some time. In February, the Ministry of Public Security announced a significant decline in newborns recorded in the hukou system, ringing alarm bells. But those figures did not include China’s entire population, with full figures originally expected to come out in the census this month. For South China Morning Post, Jacob Fromer reported on the significance of a population decline in China:

Analysts say that the signs have been clear that a demographic crisis is looming in China – and that officials there have not always been honest about the population numbers they present.

“If the data is wrong, it means that the policymaking is wrong,” said Yi. “China faces a very severe age problem.”

[…] “The demographic trends in China were already obvious before this announcement, but this news confirms fears that China’s population shrinkage continues despite relaxation of its population policies,” said Mary Gallagher, director of the University of Michigan’s International Institute and author of Authoritarian Legality in China: Law, Workers, and the State.

“Labor shortages in manufacturing and the rapid ageing of China’s population were noticed nearly two decades ago,” she said. “It is sensitive because many people blame the government for the long delay in rescinding the one-child policy.” [Source]

On Twitter, Yiqin Fu provided a primer on how Chinese officials have historically inflated China’s population figures:

Recent rhetoric and policies put forward by Chinese leaders have revealed the government’s growing concern about the country’s graying workforce. South China Morning Post’s Frank Tang reported on an unusually candid research paper published by China’s central bank warning about a looming pension deficit and debt crisis due to the rapidly ageing population:

The PBOC warned China had only about a decade left to enjoy the benefits of its large working age population, which has helped propel growth over the past four decades.

Authorities should “fully liberalise and encourage” childbirth to offset the economic effects of a falling fertility rate and ageing, warning “the pay as you go pension system can hardly cope with the ageing crisis”, the central bank said.

[…] The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences (CASS) estimated in a 2019 report the pension reserve will run out by 2035 and the deficit could swell to 11 trillion yuan by 2050.

Some provinces with shrinking populations and slow economic growth, such as the northeastern province of Heilongjiang, have already reported pension shortfalls, forcing authorities to establish a national pool and cross-province allocation to guarantee timely payment. [Source]

While the liberalization of China’s birth control policies might be welcomed by some, other policies to be implemented are expected to be decidedly more unpopular. This week, The New York Times’ Vivian Wang and Joy Dong reported on the Chinese government’s announcement that it would begin raising the retirement age:

China said last month that it would “gradually delay the legal retirement age” over the next five years, in an attempt to address one of the country’s most pressing issues. Its rapidly aging population means a shrinking labor force. State pension funds are at risk of running out. And China has some of the lowest retirement ages in the world: 50 for blue-collar female workers, 55 for white-collar female workers, and 60 for most men.

The idea, though, is deeply unpopular. The government has yet to release details of its plan, but older workers have already decried being cheated of their promised timelines, while young people worry that competition for jobs, already fierce, will intensify.

[…] The Chinese government itself abandoned a previous effort to raise retirement ages in 2015, in the face of a similar outcry.

This time, it seems determined to follow through. But it has also acknowledged the backlash. Officials appear to be treading gingerly, leaving the details vague for now but suggesting that the threshold would be raised by just a few months each year. [Source]

Less straightforward for Chinese officials will be how to promote population growth, or at least slow the decline. A confluence of social challenges has resulted in fewer citizens having children, particularly over the last year. For one, fewer couples are tying the knot. Last week, Nikkei Asia’s Iori Kawate reported that marriages in China posted the biggest drop in decades:

According to China’s Ministry of Civil Affairs, 8.13 million couples registered their marriages in 2020, down 12% and the seventh consecutive year of decline. The figure also represents a 40% fall from the 2013 peak.

[…] Slow income growth amid the outbreak is adding to a groom’s already heavy financial burden. People are also tying the knot later in life, a tendency that will likely lead to fewer newborns.

Last year’s decline was the steepest since 1982, when the number of marriages fell by 20%. The drop can be partly attributed to the prolonged closure of registration offices due to the pandemic, but finances appear to have played a major role. [Source]

The Chinese government has introduced a series of measures to promote marriage and childraising, but some of those measures have been heavily criticized. A divorce law that took effect this year that requires couples to wait out a 30-day “cooling off period” has been condemned for making it harder for victims of domestic violence to escape dangerous relationships, amid an ongoing domestic violence crisis.

This month, a crackdown on “extreme and radical politics” targeted adherents of “6B4T,” a feminist resistance movement whose adherents pledge not to marry or procreate. New Party slogans emphasizing family virtues and traditional values have launched, and feminist activists have been censored. The Wall Street Journal’s Chao Deng and Liyan Qi reported on how the new campaign to promote family values has gone hand in hand with new repressive policies and censorship of feminist voices:

During Mr. Xi’s time in power, new party slogans emphasizing “family, family education and family virtues” or “pass on the red gene” have been coupled with efforts to censor voices on women’s rights.

[…] “What are they afraid of?” asks one user in reference to the deleted accounts. “Are they afraid of more women waking up? Are they panicking when seeing the fertility rates and marriage rates?”

[…] Mr. Xi has built Confucian values, including conservative views of women’s role in the family, into his China Dream of nationalist revival, says Derek Hird of Lancaster University. “If you’ve got these highly educated women who don’t want to get married, that then becomes part of the demographic worries and concerns that play into this larger discourse on family values.”

[…] Declines in state-funded child care are among reasons Chinese women are choosing to leave work, says Joseph Chamie, a former director of the United Nations Population Division. “The challenge for many countries [seeking to raise fertility rates], including China, is the balance women face between employment, careers and caring for children and family.” [Source]



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/04/chinas-population-set-to-shrink-for-first-time-since-great-leap-forward/

China Responds To Labor Activists’ Demands With Repression, Arrests

Earlier this year, efforts to unionize China’s seven million food-delivery drivers were battered by the arrests of Chen Guojiang, or “Mengzhu” to his thousands of social media followers, and a host of other prominent labor leaders. Drivers and couriers work long, dangerous hours and receive dismal pay, if they receive pay at all—an Ele.me courier’s self immolation over unpaid wages went viral in January. At Labor Notes earlier this month, Karl Hu wrote about the activism which led to Chen Guojiang’s detention:

Chen set up 16 chat groups on the popular Chinese social media app WeChat, reaching about 15,000 delivery workers over the last two years. A public Delivery Riders Alliance channel which he operates on the app provides free legal consultations and various kinds of assistance to delivery workers. This has included mediating disputes with restaurants and security guards, towing and repairs of motorbikes, negotiations with insurance companies, and even providing free or cheap accommodation for new arrivals to Beijing.

[…] Shortly before being detained, Chen launched an online campaign to denounce delivery platform Ele.me’s Spring Festival bonus program. In his latest video, published February 19, he recorded several Ele.me workers on strike to protest bonus rules set by the company, which they believed were intended to withhold a promised bonus.

This video was watched 9.6 million times online and the topic (similar to a hashtag on Twitter) was viewed more than 200 million times on Weibo, one of China’s biggest social media platforms. This provoked great public criticism against Ele.me, which is owned by Alibaba, China’s biggest e-commerce company. Ele.me had to respond to public criticism, openly apologize to delivery workers, and promise to compensate them.

[…] One day before he was taken by the police, Chen warned that if he was not heard from, he was being detained. [Source]

At NPR, Emily Z Feng profiled “Mengzhu,” and wrote about the lengths to which Beijing police went, quite literally, to silence him:

His family says two policemen traveled in March from Beijing to Mengzhu’s hometown in Bijie, a prefecture in remote southwestern Guizhou province. They brought with them a short detention notice informing the family that Mengzhu was being held in a police station in Beijing’s Chaoyang district, where he lived.

[…] Mengzhu dropped out of school in fifth grade, and at age 14, he left Bijie in search of work in China’s big cities, like many young men from his village. With savings from earlier delivery jobs, he opened two fast-food restaurants in Beijing. When they failed to turn a profit, he returned to delivery work and picked up video blogging and got involved with labor activism. He opened a cellphone accessory store in Beijing and ran a free shelter for other delivery workers who were new to the city.

[…] ”They can do everything to arrest you, fix you with a criminal charge, sentence you to years in prison, and you change nothing,” [Chen Guojiang] recounted last September, about his detention. “So do other delivery workers still dare [to complain]? Well, I dare.” [Source]

For more on Chen Guojiang’s activism, listen to Cornell University’s Eli Friedman, an expert on Chinese labor activism, on The Arts of Travel podcast. Mandarin speakers can listen to Mengzhu in his own words on the labor-focused podcast 打工谈 Dǎgōng tán.

At SupChina, Zixu Wang wrote about the backgrounds of China’s delivery drivers, 81.7% of whom are migrant rural laborers and 87.1% of whom don’t have a high school degree:

Chen’s arrest has thrown into stark relief the dilemma of labor activists in China. The Chinese Communist Party prohibits self-established labor unions and places scrutiny on workers’ associations such as Chen’s “online alliance.” Food delivery workers, who are considered part of the “gig economy” and often lack formal employment status, have it worse than most. They are more isolated and under constant pressure, pushed by their platforms’ algorithms to rush and work overtime. In 2020, 95% of couriers worked more than eight hours per day, 66.8% worked more than 11 hours, and 28% worked more than 12 hours, according to research by the Beijing Yilian Labor Law Center. The fact that these workers aren’t allowed to unionize only makes them more vulnerable.

“The combination of authoritarian and capitalistic exploitation makes a labor movement extremely difficult,” said Aidan Chau, a researcher at China Labor Bulletin, a Hong Kong-based NGO promoting workers’ rights in China. “Although China calls itself socialist, if bureaucrats think you’re disturbing the social order, they will come to suppress you.”

[…] Workers have few recourses. Multiple food delivery workers in Beijing and the provinces of Hebei, Shandong, and Guangdong have told me about other difficulties of organizing. “If you strike, others will take advantage of it, taking more orders and making good money,” said Wáng Ruìgān 王瑞乾, a courier in Beijing. “There’s no shortage of people in the Chinese workforce.” [Source]

At Rest of World, Yi-Ling Liu wrote about how China’s delivery companies exploit drivers:

The low-level workers in China’s $97 billion food delivery sector are especially vulnerable to brutal working conditions and exploitative management practices for several reasons. First, the entire industry is locked in competition between two platforms. Meituan, backed by tech giant Tencent, controls 67% of the market share; Ele.me, owned by rival Alibaba, holds 31%. Having subsumed all other competitors (including Baidu’s delivery service), the two companies now fight over customers by offering steep discounts and cutting costs to the bone. This sometimes veers into open antagonism: Ele.me drivers are taught to chant the slogan “Kill Meituan, Ele.me is fighting with you.” In its early years, Meituan became known for cultivating a strategy of “gladiatorial entrepreneurialism,” which consisted of poaching employees and launching smear campaigns, and deployed “tactics that would make Travis Kalanick blush,” writes Kai-Fu Lee in his book AI Superpowers.

Cutthroat competition is not only baked into both companies’ cultures but is also embedded in the algorithms that underlie each platform. Meituan’s “Super Brain” and Ele.me’s “Ark” systems are driven by vast supplies of data collected on individual users, drivers, and their deliveries. “The more data collected,” explained Jeffrey Ding, an AI researcher at the Oxford Future of Humanity Institute, “the more efficient and precise the algorithms [become].” Over time, these systems get better at allocating tasks, assigning routes, and optimizing deliveries. In turn, this encourages customers to order more takeout, prompts workers to move just a little faster, and provides platforms with even more information. Then, the cycle accelerates. In 2016, maximum delivery times were capped at 1 hour; by 2018, this was whittled down to 38 minutes. [Source]

The state cracks down on independent unions because all unions must be part of a state-run umbrella organization. The Economist covered the Chinese government’s attempts to absorb “gig workers” into the state-run All China Federation of Trade Unions:

The ruling Communist Party’s response has been to try to persuade gig workers to join a trade union. In 2015 China’s leader, Xi Jinping, launched a plan for “experimental reform” of the umbrella organisation to which all unions must belong, the All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU). The full text was not released, but state media said the aim was to make the federation focus on concrete measures to help workers, and to reduce “instability”. It urged boosting membership among rural migrants, with apps to make it easier, hoping this would discourage protests. In 2018 the ACFTU said it would try extra hard to recruit eight groups of non-factory labourers, including food-delivery workers (around 7m people) and couriers (4m).

New unions for gig workers have struggled to make themselves appealing. The first was founded in Shanghai in 2018 with about 400 members. It offered workers instructions in traffic rules and sold them watermelons at a discount. Regardless of reforms, unions are a wing of the Communist Party, and union officials are considered civil servants, so they cannot do anything that goes against government policy, says Chris Chan of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Sometimes, a firm’s boss is also head of the union. “The most important task of local governments isn’t to protect workers’ rights, it is to maintain social stability and ensure economic development,” he says.

[…] Yet it remains distant from many workers. Of 350 delivery workers interviewed by Jenny Chan of Hong Kong Polytechnic University, not one knew what the federation does. In the decade before China’s clampdown on labour activism in 2015, the ACFTU engaged directly with workers, even experimenting with collective bargaining and running training sessions for workers in their factories. Now, says Mr Chan, as the party reasserts its dominance throughout society, union training for workers often happens at local “party-masses service centres”. It involves telling workers not to strike or protest and pointing them towards mediation or arbitration if they have gripes. Hotlines have also been set up. [Source]

On April 26, Chinese regulators opened anti-monopoly proceedings against food-delivery conglomerate Meituan, underscoring a contradiction in Chinese labor reforms: the state is intent on bringing powerful corporations to heel but unwilling to allow labor to exercise power towards that end. Meituan is just the second company to face fines under new anti-monopoly regulations (Alibaba was the first). However, regulators seem to be concerned with the company’s treatment of other business, not its own employees.

Recent crackdowns are not limited to labor—the state has tightened restrictions on feminist activists as well. The popular social media site Douban shut down a number of popular feminist groups, and Weibo “trolls” that targeted feminist activists for harassment were egged on by the company’s CEO. In an interview translated for the leftist Hong Kong website Lausan by Chin Kinnan and Hung X.L., an anonymous Chinese student organizer compared the Chinese feminist and labor movements:

These two movements operate very differently. When room exists for the feminist movement to grow, activists tend to engage in offline interventions, such as performance art. In general, however, they have always focused on theory. Performance art, in part, helps to shape the development of this discourse. The movement’s other focus is to promote and popularize feminism: Any conversation that touches on gender and sexuality is part of feminist activism.

The labor movement works differently. Labor organizations mostly focus on grassroots organizing. Most of this work cannot be moved online, and it is also difficult to train people remotely without first exposing new activists to the field. While many young people sympathize with workers, there remains a big gap between sympathy and action. Labor organizing takes patience, and can be extremely boring and dreary at times. Folks who cannot stand the loneliness often do not last long. It’s harder to have a sense of accomplishment now, because we can only execute small actions in the face of crackdown.

In addition to material restrictions, compared to our peers in the feminist movement, I must admit that organizers who work in labor organizing lack imagination for organizational work and worker empowerment. Right now, we are unable to provide a personalized process to recruit and onboard new activists online. [Source]

White collar workers also have gripes about labour conditions in China. China’s public holiday system—which forces workers to come in on weekends to make up for free days—is a target of particular ire. “The so-called five-day holiday is paid for by my Sunday. If there’s no time for these days off, then don’t give them to us,” said one Weibo user quoted by Sixth Tone. Unfair contracts are another complaint. A recent farce—a Russian man was “held hostage” on a Chinese boy band TV show after he failed to read the fine print of his contract—drew sympathy from broad swathes of the Chinese public who saw themselves in his struggle. Chafing against his contract, he intentionally tanked his performances, hoping to be voted off the show. Unfortunately for him, audiences loved his unvarnished disdain and kept him on the show for three months. He ultimately lost in the finals, writing, “I’m finally getting off work,” on his Weibo.



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/04/china-responds-to-labor-activists-demands-with-repression-arrests/

Monday 26 April 2021

Netizen Voices: “With Its Own Actions, China Has Proved That What Chloé Zhao Said Was True”

Chloé Zhao made history on Sunday as the first woman of color to win an Oscar for best director. Her film “Nomadland” also took the top prize as the 2021 best picture. But in China, the country of Zhao’s birth, celebrations were muted by a state coordinated blackout of coverage of the awards, following a nationalist backlash in March, when users dug up a comment by Zhao from 2013 that was critical of China. The Wall Street Journal’s Liza Lin reported on the censored coverage of Zhao’s victory:

Ms. Zhao’s win, just the second time a woman has walked away with best director, unleashed a flurry of congratulatory messages on Chinese social-media sites when it was announced Monday morning Beijing time. By midafternoon, nearly all of the posts had been erased.

Searches for her name on Baidu and Sogou, the country’s dominant search engines, produced numerous links to news of her previous accolades but only scattered links to deleted articles about the Academy Award honor.

State broadcaster China Central Television, the official Xinhua News Agency, and Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily stayed silent on the award throughout the day. Two state media reporters told The Wall Street Journal that they had received orders from China’s propaganda ministry not to report on Ms. Zhao’s victory, despite what they described as her status as a Chinese national, because of “previous public opinion.”

Earlier this year, Ms. Zhao was pilloried online in China for critical comments she made about the country in a 2013 magazine interview. [Source]

In the critical comments discovered by netizens, one of which was later found to be a transcription error, Zhao described China as a place “where there are lies everywhere.” That was enough to see the hashtags #Nomadland and #NomadlandReleaseDate blocked on Weibo in March, while marketing materials for the film disappeared.

On Monday, many Chinese netizens lamented the now missed opportunity to celebrate Zhao’s historic achievement. At Quartz, Jane Li reported on some of the voices on the Chinese internet which looked for alternative expressions of support for Zhao that could get around the censors:

Many people are figuring out ways to celebrate Zhao’s success, without mentioning her name or Nomadland. Qiao Mai, a Chinese novelist with over 1 million followers, posted “joy that can’t be celebrated” on her Weibo page in a supposedly subtle reference to the censorship. Qiao posted the line shortly after she posted a screenshot with a caption that says Frances McDormand, who won best actress for Nomadland stars in Zhao’s film. “This place has become a cyber ‘nomadland,’” one of Qiao’s followers commented under the post. In another post, a blogger said “she made it, like it or not” without mentioning Zhao, a message that was quickly grasped by other commentators who said that even quiet celebration is still a celebration. [Source]

Many netizens seized onto a well-known Chinese verse from the “Three Character Classic” that Zhao cited in her acceptance speech at the Oscars. “人之初,性本善,” said Zhao, reciting the first verse of the text, translated in English as: “People at birth, are inherently good.” The verse, taught to almost every Chinese child, was soon blocked on Chinese social media.

Many netizens were quick to point out the second verse: “性相近,习相远” (their natures are similar, but their habits make them different), shared the character in Xi Jinping’s surname, and poked fun at the censorship:

CDT’s Chinese editors collected several more comments by Chinese netizens before they were removed from social media platforms:

文宣中国:People at birth, are inherently good. Their natures are similar, it’s the sensitive characters in their names that make them different. Congratulations to director Chloé Zhao!

fangshimin:Because Chloé Zhao and “Nomadland” won the Oscars, “Nomadland” and “Oscar” have both become sensitive works on Weibo and are no longer searchable. Does Chloe Zhao, who no longer exists behind the wall, still believe that “People at birth are inherently good?”

西极南隅:Is Chloé Zhao’s “Nomadland” not an anti-American film? It hands a knife to anti-American foreign forces, exposing American’s dark side. And as a result, the Americans congratulated her, but China blocked her????? I can’t understand it.

LiuDasheng1123:What Nomadland captures is the condition of Americans at the margins of society, the unglamorous side of America. The Oscars are awarded to this “humiliating beauty” of a film, reflecting the self-confidence of Americans and their courage to face their own social problems. It isn’t like this ancient nation in the East, where being insulted means retaliating with a ban.

来自星星的dud:She was censored for expressing her personal feelings one time in 2013. Meanwhile Han Han once said “the red scarf is stained red with menstrual blood,” so why can his movie still premiere on new year’s day?

Kuren2021:With its own actions, China has proved that what Chloé Zhao said was true.

xinxin83:Originally we should’ve been even happier than after last year’s “Parasite” victory… the second woman in Oscar history to win best director, and the third Asian to win best director.

智慧型打骂机器人:The people who come out of places where there are lies everywhere really are amazing.

postern_overwal:”Parasite” criticizes South Korea itself, “Nomadland” criticizes America the imperial power, and it is still censored. This gang of Chinese officials are bereft of consistency and tolerance.

songma:Chleo Zhao [sic] has not filmed any works featuring China or Chinese people as subjects, “Nomadland” is an exclusive reflection on and record of America. I personally think she has nothing to do with China, except that she was born here.

HioPepper:With the exception of being banned in China, “Nomadland” has nothing to do with China. It is an American filming a picture about Americans in America. [Chinese]

The controversy about Zhao’s comments was not the only source of consternation for Chinese officials at this year’s Oscars. State media was also angered by the nomination of Anders Hammer’s “Do Not Split,” about the 2019 Hong Kong protests, for best short documentary. In Hong Kong, the awards ceremony was not broadcast for the first time in over half a century, and some residents speculated that it had to do with the short documentary’s nomination.

The film ultimately lost out to “Colette,” a short documentary about a 90-year-old former French resistance fighter. But in a nod to “Do Not Split” in their acceptance speech, the makers of Colette said “the protesters of Hong Kong are not forgotten.” Chinese netizens also found their own ways to acknowledge the short film, despite the censorship of its Chinese title.



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/04/netizen-voices-with-its-own-actions-china-has-proved-that-what-chloe-zhao-said-was-true/

Photo: Finding the Perfect Angle at West Lake, by Dickson Phua

Finding the Perfect Angle at West Lake, by Dickson Phua (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)



source https://chinadigitaltimes.net/2021/04/photo-finding-the-perfect-angle-at-west-lake-by-dickson-phua/