Workers Across China Demand Unpaid Wages Ahead of Lunar New Year

As the holiday nears, migrant workers across several cities say they have not been paid for months.
Workers Across China Demand Unpaid Wages Ahead of Lunar New Year
Beijing labor and social security officials direct migrant workers seeking their defaulted wages, in Beijing on Feb. 9, 2007. China Photos/Getty Images
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As Lunar New Year approaches, workers across China are taking to the streets over unpaid wages, adding pressure on businesses already strained by a slowing economy and on local authorities tasked with keeping order.

The timing of these protests is sensitive. The weeks before Lunar New Year are typically when migrant workers expect to receive back pay before returning home. This year, however, workers in multiple cities have said that wages have gone unpaid for months. China-based observers told The Epoch Times that the disputes reflect a slowing economy that is squeezing companies’ cash flow and making it harder to meet payroll.

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Sean Tseng
Sean Tseng
Author
Sean Tseng is a Canada-based reporter for The Epoch Times covering U.S.–China relations, CCP politics, trade policy, and emerging technologies including AI and defense. He holds a BASc in mechanical engineering from the University of British Columbia.