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Worker Strikes in China Remained High in 2024: Report

Observers say the real number of protests is much higher, as most information is blocked by the Chinese regime’s pervasive censorship apparatus.
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Worker Strikes in China Remained High in 2024: Report
Migrant workers stand near signs advertising their skills as they wait by a street to be hired in Shenyang, in northeastern China's Liaoning province, on Feb. 6, 2023. STR/AFP via Getty Images
By Alex Wu
2/2/2025Updated: 2/3/2025
0:00

The China Labor Bulletin (CLB), a Hong Kong-based human rights organization, has released its 2024 report on China’s worker strikes, reporting that the total number of labor protests across China remained high throughout the year and were more widespread.

The report titled “China Labour Bulletin Strike Map data analysis: 2024 year in review for workers’ rights” was published on Jan. 29, Chinese New Year’s Day. It recorded 1,509 worker strikes across mainland China in 2024, which is less than the 1,794 strikes recorded in 2023. The recent numbers are high compared with the 1,389 cases in 2019 before the COVID-19 pandemic.

The three provinces that saw the most strikes in 2024 were all in China’s coastal industrial areas, namely Guangdong, with 346 cases; Shandong, with 106 cases; and Zhejiang, with 101 cases. However, according to the report, many labor protests also occurred in inland provinces, such as Henan (80 cases), Hebei (69 cases), and Shaanxi (59 cases).

The construction industry, consistent with prior years, saw the most protests, with 733 strikes accounting for 48.6 percent of the total cases. The manufacturing industry had 452 ​​worker strikes, accounting for 30 percent. It was followed by the service sector, and then the transportation and logistics industries.

Han Dongfang, a Radio Free Asia host who led the compilation of the CLB report, said that the recorded 1,509 strikes cannot fully reflect the real situation in China. This is “because the statistical method used to obtain clues about strikes was to collect information from social media posts,” he said, adding that each of the cases needs to be verified by CLB staff before being posted on CLB’s strike map.

Han said that there are definitely some strike incidents in China that were not included in the report, as “not everyone who organized collective actions posted them online.” In addition, CLB has limited staff, making it difficult to compile comprehensive statistics, and it is difficult to obtain official data from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), he said.

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Because of the CCP’s strict censorship, a lot of information on social media is quickly deleted or blocked, making it impossible for CLB to collect all of the data, Wu Shaoping, a former rights lawyer in China who currently resides in the United States, told The Epoch Times on Jan. 31. There’s a significant gap between the recorded data and the real number of strikes happening in China, as “all their data is sourced from the Chinese social media,” he said.

Wu Shaoping said he thinks that there will be more and more strikes and social protests “because China’s economy is in a downturn, and a large number of companies are laying off employees.”

“This is more in line with the social reality [in China],” he said.

Wu Te, an independent commentator on China’s workers’ rights situation, noted that most of the strikes recorded by CLB “are simply asking for wages or economic compensation for factory relocation and layoffs, and a few involve labor treatment.”

He told The Epoch Times on Jan. 31 that many people expect an organization such as the Polish Solidarity independent trade union, which brought down the communist regime in Poland, to emerge in China.

“But it requires a high degree of political consensus among workers and strong organizational capabilities,“ Wu Te said. ”At present, the Chinese workers’ movement still has a long way to go before this can be achieved.”

Police check the identification of passersby as they search for petitioners near China's Banking Regulatory Commission in Beijing on Aug. 6, 2018. (Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images)
Police check the identification of passersby as they search for petitioners near China's Banking Regulatory Commission in Beijing on Aug. 6, 2018. Greg Baker/AFP via Getty Images
Wu Shaoping expressed a more optimistic view of China’s worker protests. He cited the White Paper Movement against the CCP’s COVID-19 lockdown in China in 2022 as an example. The mass protests across the country eventually led to the CCP abandoning its three-year draconian COVID-19 pandemic restrictions.

“One day, like the White Paper Revolution in 2022, everyone may stand up against the CCP’s dictatorship. So I think it’s entirely possible that strikes or protests will eventually turn into a revolution to overthrow the CCP,” he said, “because the CCP regime is indeed too evil and has committed countless crimes against the people and is still harming the Chinese people.”

Wu Shaoping said the CCP regime is not only the enemy of the Chinese people, “but also the enemy of the democratic, civilized, and free world.”

He warned that as long as the CCP gains enough power and economic, military, and technological capability, “it will certainly extend its claws to other countries and harm people around the world.”

Luo Ya contributed to this report.
Alex Wu
Alex Wu
Author
Alex Wu is a U.S.-based writer for The Epoch Times focusing on Chinese society, Chinese culture, human rights, and international relations.
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