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Labor shortage hits cities as holiday nears(2)

2013-01-18 08:53 China Daily     Web Editor: Wang YuXia comment

Xia said the company has tripled hourly wages for casual workers during the Spring Festival holiday because of the extra demand.

The normal monthly salary for a domestic helper is between 3,000 ($482) and 5,000 yuan while casual workers earn between 15 yuan and 30 yuan per hour.

Despite being enticed by a higher pay, many domestic helpers still choose to go home rather than stay in cities.

"Basically, about 70 percent of our staff will go home and the rest will be booked in advance," said an employee at Shanghai Achieve-Easy Housekeeping Services.

Many of the large army of city couriers are also heading home. Chen Mingqiang, at the delivery firm YTO Express, manages about 100 couriers in Shanghai's Huangpu district. He said about 60 percent of his couriers will return home.

"We persuade those workers who find it difficult to buy tickets home to stay in their jobs and arrange for them to take a vacation after Spring Festival," Chen said.

"The couriers can cope with the work if they are well-organized and they can earn an extra 100 yuan per day," he added. Most couriers of YTO take a 15-day break during the festival.

The catering industry also sees a shortage of workers during the busiest period of Spring Festival. About 80 percent of the staff at the restaurant chain Shanghai Min are from outside the city, according to Arica Huang, a senior manager of the company's public relations department.

"We reward our employees who recommend friends and relatives for work in the peak season and raise allowances for frontline staff," Huang said.

The company has booked workers in advance from service agencies to help fill the holiday staff shortage.

Statistics from ganji.com, an online platform that offers classifieds, shows that since December 2012, the nationwide demand for cooks and nannies during Spring Festival increases dramatically.

Li Dajing, director of the Beijing Homemaking Service Association, said the association will launch 50 hotlines from Friday to accept applications from local service workers or university students who want to do casual labor during the holiday.

Li said the domestic-helper shortage is less severe than in previous years because the rising wages over the period has restrained demand. Many families find it hard to afford help, as nannies with a salary lower than 2,500 yuan per month are rare.

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