Termination

China
Grounds
There is no at-will employment in China, and termination of employees must be for cause.
Employees subject to termination laws
All employees.
Restricted or prohibited terminations
Employees:
- Who are pregnant, on maternity leave or in the nursing period
- Who are suffering from work-related injuries or occupational diseases
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Who have been employed by the employer for more than 15 years and have less than 5 years from the statutory retirement age (60 for male employees, 55 for female employees holding office positions and 50 for female factory workers) or
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Who are on sick leave (for certain cumulative periods depending on the employee's seniority), may not be unilaterally terminated
May not be unilaterally terminated.
Third-party approval for termination
Trade unions should be notified of any unilateral termination.
Mass layoff rules
Strict information and consultation rules apply where 20 individuals or equal to or more than 10 percent of the total number of employees are to be made redundant.
The employer must also notify the trade union and all employees of the redundancies and report to the local labor bureau.
Notice
30 days’ prior notice. Not required for misconduct cases or termination due to failure to meet the conditions of employment during the probation period.
Statutory right to pay in lieu of notice or garden leave
There is a statutory right to make a payment in lieu of notice. Garden leave with full pay is also permissible.
Severance
Severance pay is based on the number of years an employee has worked with the employer at the rate of 1 month's wage for each year worked, rounded up to the nearest 0.5 or 1 year. The wages used for calculation during service years after 2008 are subject to a statutory cap.