Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com to increase employee pay by 14 per cent over next two years
- JD.com said in a WeChat post that it will increase employee annual salaries to the equivalent of 16-months pay by July 2023 from the current 14-months
- Average wages in China increased 4.3 per cent in 2020, but growth accelerated to 12.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2021 thanks to a relatively low base a year earlier
Chinese e-commerce giant JD.com said it will increase employee salaries by an average of 14 per cent over the next two years in a show of financial strength at a time when many of its rivals are grappling with regulatory scrutiny.
In a brief notice published on its public social media account on WeChat on Tuesday, the company said it will increase average employee annual salaries to the equivalent of 16-months pay by July 2023 from the current 14-months, representing a 14 per cent increase on average.
The Beijing-based company counted about 370,000 total employees as of March, after adding 100,000 more up to December 31 last year. Two employees working in separate departments in the company told the South China Morning Post that they have not yet received any notification about the salary increase.
The move, apparently intended to boost staff morale, has attracted a lot of attention on Chinese social media at a time when broad-based pay rises have become increasingly rare for workers in the highly competitive e-commerce sector.
According to China’s National Bureau of Statistics, average wages increased 4.3 per cent in 2020, but growth accelerated to 12.4 per cent in the first quarter of 2021 thanks to a relatively low base a year earlier when the country was hit hard by the coronavirus.
The JD.com pay rise is in sharp contrast to what the company faced two years ago when founder and CEO Richard Liu Qiangdong told his delivery drivers that their base salaries would be cancelled in favour of a pay system based on how many deliveries they made.