China sets new rules to ban discrimination in online job recruitment

APD NEWS

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The Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security prohibits discrimination in job recruitment. /CFP

China has decided to rid the recruitment process of all sorts of discrimination based on gender, ethnicity and religious beliefs. The task will be accomplished through a set of new regulations issued by the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security on Wednesday. These rules will take effect from March 1, 2021.

The latest stipulations require HR agencies, especially companies involved in online recruitment, to fortify their protection of people's personal information. They prohibit them from leaking, altering, destroying or illegally selling or providing others with the ID number, age, gender, address, contact and other personal information of individuals that they've collected. These companies are also asked to conduct annual security audits to ensure the continued protection of the personal information they've collected.

Many netizens say the new rules mean well but might not work, as job providers will find other excuses not to hire people they are biased toward, such as pregnant women or those over 45.

Sina Tech conducted a live-updated online survey on Chinese social media platform Weibo, titled "Gender discrimination in job seeking." In the survey, over 652 people among 1,849 participants said it's better for companies to openly declare their intention so that job aspirants will not waste their time on the company, while 516 people said discrimination in job seeking is very normal, as some jobs are more suitable to be done by men rather than women. Another 624 people agreed that discrimination should be banned in job recruitment.

In an online survey conducted by China News on Weibo, 54.5 percent of respondents said they had experienced gender discrimination in job hunting. /CFP

In another online survey titled "Have you ever encountered gender discrimination in life?" conducted by China News on Weibo, over 64.5 percent of the respondents said they had faced discrimination in job hunting. Among them, 54.5 percent said they had experienced gender discrimination, and 10 percent said they experienced other types of discrimination. About 15 percent said they had never encountered gender discrimination. Others said they hadn't reached the working age, hoping they don't need to suffer this in the future. Over 8,600 people participated in the survey.

It's not the first time officials are regulating gender discrimination in recruitment. Last year, over nine ministries issued the "Six Don'ts," listing actions that companies should not indulge in: excluding women in the recruitment process, rejecting women based on gender-related issues, asking women for information like their marital status and pregnancy planning, raising the job selection threshold for women, and restricting women from giving birth as an employment condition.

Xu Yu, a 32-year-old female who has been working for nine years, said when she tried to change her job in 2018, of the five companies that called her for an interview, three told her that she could not get the job if she wanted to have a baby in the following years. At the time, she was married but without a child, which made the employers wonder.

The experience made Xu realize for the first time that when a woman enters her 30s, she faces more restrictions in the job market.

Jin Xin, a 36-year-old female HR manager, said the companies are very careful in recruiting a female employee because of the high cost. "If the company hires a female who soon gets pregnant, for at least four months or as long as half of a year, her position will be vacant with no one to do the work, but the company still has to pay her salary. So, during recruitment, companies will think twice when they encounter a woman."

Besides gender discrimination, recruitment is also plagued by age discrimination. /CFP

However, Jin said she could understand the difficulties faced by the companies and that the cost related to pregnancy should be shared by the whole society, including the government and employers. She said she had interviews with 10 companies last year but was rejected by five, and their reasons were the same: She was married and without a child.

"I really wanted to tell those interviewers not to ask me that question again!" Jin said.

Besides gender discrimination, recruitment is also plagued by age discrimination.

Many netizens complain that some companies require that potential candidates be below 40 or 45. Even in the recruitment of civil servants, many departments require that the job seeker's age not exceed 35. And the new rules announced on Wednesday do not cover this type of discrimination.