| Annual Bonus Season Brings Gain and Pain |
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More than 80% of companies polled say they will hand out hongbao to employees. Zhu Junting, assistant to an international pharmaceutical company's Chief Executive Officer, has been counting a wad of money she was given by her boss, along with praise for her good performance. "Given that the impact of the financial crisis is fading away, we all received a fat annual bonus - as much as 20,000 yuan ($2,929.42)," Zhu said. She added that every department in her company had their own bonus scheme with staff rewarded according to their annual assessment results. Lu Xuan, a member of the administrative staff of a State-owned company, was happily expecting a big rise in his bank balance. "To be honest, our annual bonus is secure no matter how terrible the economy is," said Lu. "That's because our company is operating in a monopolized sector with much government support.” He said that despite the financial tsunami, average members of the administrative staff at his company received about 20,000 yuan in hongbao - red envelopes containing cash bonuses - last year. They expect to get at least 30,000 yuan this year. "The engineering staff or people at management level are likely to receive double or triple what I received for their bonus, or even as much as hundreds of thousands of yuan," he added. Lu said he spent his entire annual bonus along with his savings on the down payment for his new apartment in According to Mark Carriban, managing director for The figures come from a recent survey by It found employees from the polled enterprises would receive fatter annual bonus compared with previous years. About 55% of employers promised to give bonuses equal to more than 10% of annual salaries to their staff, Carriban added. According to the survey, about 91% of banking and financial enterprises will award their staff annual bonuses. Many banks will give bonuses equal to two to four months' salary. Securities, investment and assets management companies are expected to give bonuses of three to five months' salary. Guangzhou Daily reported a receptionist with a financial company received 100,000 yuan as her annual bonus while managers of the company would get as much as 1 million yuan. However, Linda Li, a manager at one of the big four accounting firms who has been working for four years, said:" We didn't receive any bonus for 2009 and we didn't get any in 2008 either. Of course, we expect some bonus ahead of the Spring Festival gathering, but the reality is it will be zero.” Industry insiders said some financial agencies would give the annual bonus as part of the regular salary to their staff, rather than paying an extra amount ahead of the Lunar New Year. The Only about 46% of media, public relations and advertising companies agreed to the employees' hongbao. Parts of the sector were badly hit by the downturn. Cindy Ji, a Beijing-based journalist with a State-owned news agency, said she received 8,000 yuan as annual bonus. "Compared with my reporter friends, I should feel blessed since most of them got 1,000 yuan or even nothing," Ji said. According to the Human resources experts said it showed that after a year's struggle, although many companies had striven to cut their costs, they were still willing to hold on to talented staff by offering a hefty bonus. Feng Xu, an analyst with a financial website in "I really need the bonus to relieve the pressure from my house mortgage," Feng said. "I also need the money so I can afford to go back to my hometown for the family gathering during the Spring Festival. Everything is expensive during the festival.” For employees working for smaller enterprises, a fat hongbao might be an unachievable dream. Yang Juanjuan, a 26-year-old office worker at an international trade company in Xu Mohan, a sales person with an English training company, is also concerned about his bonus. "It will be nothing this year because the performance of the outlet I'm working for was not satisfactory in 2009. However, our foreign staff are very likely to receive something.” The pressure over bonuses can even prompt some people to lie about them. Sui Qing, 25, has worked as a salesman at an insurance firm in the capital for three years. "I have got nothing again this year because of my dismal performance. Nonetheless, I'm planning to give my parents 10,000 yuan which I saved from my monthly salary," he said. "I will tell my parents that it is an annual bonus for my excellent work in 2009," he said. "I have to tell a lie because I don't want to disappoint them or make them worry about my life in According to a survey by Zhilian Recruiting, a Chinese human resources firm, more than 40% of 7,000 respondents will deposit a half of their annual bonus into their bank accounts, while 20% of them will put all the money in the bank.
Reference: China Daily |
