A Chinese court just ruled companies can't fire workers simply because AI can replace them

midian182

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A hot potato: A court in China has reached a ruling that would likely be welcomed by many people in the rest of the world: that companies cannot legally lay off workers or even cut their salaries just because an AI can replace them.

We see a lot of stories about US tech giants laying off employees because AI systems are replacing them. As was the case with Meta, Amazon, and Block, these cuts are usually framed as ways to streamline businesses and embrace new technologies – even when they're not – which tends to give the firms' share prices a boost.

However, the Hangzhou Intermediate People's Court has ruled that a company illegally fired a worker after he refused to take a demotion after an AI took his job.

The worker, identified only as Zhou, was hired in November 2022 as a quality assurance supervisor with a monthly compensation of 25,000 yuan ($3,655). Somewhat ironically, his job was to monitor output by AI models to identify and filter any illegal and copyright-infringing material.

But Zhou's position was eventually automated by an AI system. His company therefore decided to demote him to a lower-level position with a reduced wage of 15,000 yuan ($2,193).

Zhou understandably refused to change jobs, so he was fired – a decision blamed on organizational restructuring and reduced staffing needs. He was offered 311,695 yuan ($45,650) in severance pay.

Zhou refused to accept the deal and took his former employer to an arbitration panel, which ruled his dismissal unlawful. The company then sued in district court and appealed to the Hangzhou Intermediate People's Court. Both courts found that AI was not a legal excuse to get rid of staff.

"The termination grounds cited by the company did not fall under negative circumstances such as business downsizing or operational difficulties, nor did they meet the legal condition that made it 'impossible to continue the employment contract,'" the court said.

The question was whether replacing Zhou counted as a "major change in objective circumstances" under China's Labor Contract Law. The court found it did not. AI automation is a voluntary business decision, not an unforeseeable event that makes a contract impossible to continue.

The court also said the offered position was not a reasonable reassignment, something Zhou probably noticed when his new salary came with a 40% cut.

This doesn't mean Chinese companies can never restructure around AI. But employers must negotiate, train workers, and make reasonable reassignment offers instead of simply pointing to a chatbot and heading straight for layoffs.

The ruling echoes a December case in Beijing involving a map data collector whose job was automated. That court also found that AI adoption was a business choice, not a natural disaster or sudden policy change.

Whether courts elsewhere in the world follow China's line remains to be seen. But the message to AI-happy employers in the country is clear: new technology is no magic "fire everyone with no consequences" card.

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Well, at least They pretend They are still a socialist country having "communist" in the name. Western politicians don't give a f*ck They are supposed to be democratic having "republic" in the name. Only corporate oligarchy.
 
China isn't some inferior comminist wasteland, just a different way of life, a different iron fist. Money rules all in the end.
 
Well, at least They pretend They are still a socialist country having "communist" in the name. Western politicians don't give a f*ck They are supposed to be democratic having "republic" in the name. Only corporate oligarchy.
At this point that communist country is looking a lot better than the United States.
 
Looks like total BS, all this is likely just propaganda nonsense.

Courts in China serve mostly decorative purposes, they can't decide anything of importance.
This one is from the CCP in support of Chinese trolls, who will now spread nonsense (like all the comments above) for some time.

What makes the story especially hilarious is the alleged occupation of the allegedly fired guy - "to identify and filter any illegal and copyright-infringing material". Nice to see that the propaganda department of the CCP has sense of humor.
 
He was offered 12-18 months of compensation and he wanted to keep his crappy job?? I would've taken that deal lol. I don't know how you guys can say this company was doing the "wrong" thing. If you were laid off because of AI and you couldn't find a new job after that amount of time, then your entire livelihood was at risk in the first place (regardless of AI). That amount of compensation allows you to train for an entirely new line of work too.

And if you don't allow a business to lay people off because of necessary changes, then you risk losing your job due to the company being unable to stay afloat. If your job can't realize savings due to AI, others will do it and your company won't be able to compete with more efficient AI-powered businesses (then you lose your job anyways, except without the compensation). If China isn't allowing layoffs due to AI, that's going to eventually hamper their exports.
 
So companies with existing employees can't fire them just to replace them with AI. That means new companies that start with no employees can simply impliment AI from the get-go and easily out-compete those older companies. Got it.
 
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