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All-China Federation of Trade Unions
China's national trade union center
China's national trade union center
| Field | Value | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| name | All-China Federation of Trade Unions | ||||||
| image | ACFTU logo.svg | ||||||
| image_size | 155px | ||||||
| native_name | 中华全国总工会 | ||||||
| native_name_lang | cn | ||||||
| founded | |||||||
| type | People's organization; national trade union center | ||||||
| members | {{plainlist | ||||||
| * 302 million (2017)<ref>{{Cite web | url | http://acftu.people.com.cn/n1/2017/0410/c197470-29200210.html | title=王晓峰:全国已建基层工会282.9万个 覆盖职工会员3.02亿人--中国工会新闻--人民网 | access-date=22 December 2017 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171222220213/http://acftu.people.com.cn/n1/2017/0410/c197470-29200210.html | archive-date=22 December 2017 | url-status=live }} |
| * 193 million (2008)<ref name | econMembership required:Trade unions in China , The Economist, 31 July 2008 | ||||||
| * 134 million (2005)<ref name | "ICTUR" | ||||||
| publication | Workers' Daily | ||||||
| affiliation | WFTU | ||||||
| Profintern (historical) | |||||||
| key_people | Wang Dongming, Chairman | ||||||
| , Party Secretary | |||||||
| headquarters | Beijing, China | ||||||
| location_country | People's Republic of China | ||||||
| website |
- 302 million (2017)
- 280 million (2013)
- 250 million (2012)
- 193 million (2008)
- 134 million (2005) Profintern (historical) , Party Secretary
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The All-China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU) is the national trade union center and people's organization of the People's Republic of China. It is the largest trade union in the world with 302 million members in 1,713,000 primary trade union organizations. The ACFTU is divided into 31 regional federations and 10 national industrial unions. The ACFTU is the country's sole legally mandated trade union, with which all enterprise-level trade unions must be affiliated. There has been dispute over whether ACFTU is an independent trade union or a trade union at all. The federation owns a higher education institution—the China University of Labor Relations.
History
The Federation was founded on 1 May 1925 when the "Second National Labor Congress" of China convened in Guangdong with 277 delegates representing 540,000 workers, and adopted the Constitution of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions. Between 1922 and 1927, the organization flourished, as did the Chinese Communist Party's control over the trade union movement. The labor movement had grown enormously, particularly in the three industrial and commercial centers of Canton, Hong Kong, and Shanghai, but it also had some organizational success in other cities such as Wuhan. The ACFTU was restricted in 1927 by the newly established rule of the Nationalist regime under Chiang Kai-shek,
By the rise of the People’s Republic in 1949, the ACFTU was established as China's sole national labor union center, but was again dissolved in 1966 in the wake of the Cultural Revolution in favor of revolutionary committees.
The ACFTU had the major role in advancing the Labor Contract Law, which came into effect in 2008. The ACFTU drafted the law and proposed it to the National People's Congress.
According to a 2011 study during the period of rapid economic growth in China the ACFTU has prioritized the interests of business over the interests of labor and has lost legitimacy in the eyes of many laborers.
In 2018, the 17th National Congress of the All-China Federation of Trade Unions was held at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. At the congress Union leadership faced pressure to stop acting as a bridge or mediator between workers and management and start acting as a genuine voice of the workers. This pressure arose both internally and was also applied by the CCP.
In 2018, the ACFTU identified platform economy food delivery drivers among its eight priority groups of workers for protection. It increased its skills training, legal assistance, and provided some medical benefits for these workers.
Organization
As of early 2024, the ACFTU has 300 million members and one million officials, making it the world's largest union.
The Communist Party controls the appointment of ACFTU officials at the regional and national levels. ACFTU employees are public servants who must pass the examinations required of public servants.
Grassroots level enterprise unions are generally established by local union officials in consultation with enterprise management.
Relation to the state

The ACFTU advocates for workers' interests within the CCP and the government. It also seeks to address occupational health and safety issues and carries on industrial policy oversight.
ACFTU activist Guo Wencai has said that democratic elections were a key standard to measure the effectiveness of a trade union and noted that the practice of Chinese company chiefs "appointing union leaders or assigning someone from their human resources department to act as union leader hampers a trade union's independence and its ability to protect workers' rights."
The International Confederation of Free Trade Unions (now the International Trade Union Confederation) claims that the ACFTU is not an independent union, stating in its policy: There are differing approaches among ICFTU affiliates and Global Union Federations concerning contacts with the ACFTU ranging from "no contacts" to "constructive dialog." The ICFTU, noting that the ACFTU is not an independent trade union organization and, therefore, cannot be regarded as an authentic voice of Chinese workers, reaffirms its request to all affiliates and Global Union Federations having contacts with the Chinese authorities, including the ACFTU, to engage in critical dialog. This includes raising violations of fundamental workers' and trade union rights in any such meetings, especially concerning cases of detention of trade union and labor rights activists.
Publications
The ACFTU publishes various journals, magazines, and other media, including Worker's Daily.
Other labor activism in China
Main article: Labor relations in China
The ACFTU is China's only legal trade union.
The independent Beijing Workers' Autonomous Federation formed during the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests. Martial Law Command Headquarters issued a public notice declaring the BWAF an illegal organization and ordering it to disband on the grounds that Federation leaders were among "the main instigators and organizers in the capital of the counterrevolutionary rebellion."
Since the 1990s, grassroots non-government organizations focused on labor advocacy have increased. As a result of their precarious legal position, they rarely engage in overt labor resistance.
The failure of the ACFTU to advocate for workers has led to an increase in wildcat strikes and other unauthorized labor action.
Member organizations
- All-China Federation of Railway Workers' Unions
- China University of Labor Relations
- National Committee of the Chinese Agricultural, Forestry and Water Conservancy Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Aviation Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Banking Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Defense Industry, Postal and Telecommunications Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Educational, Scientific, Cultural, Medical and Sports Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Energy and Chemical Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Financial, Commercial, Light Industry, Textile and Tobacco Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Machinery, Metallurgical and Building Material Workers' Union
- National Committee of the Chinese Seamen and Construction Workers' Union
Regional affiliates
- Hong Kong Federation of Trade Unions
- Macau Federation of Trade Unions
List of chairmen
Note: Until 1987, Wade-Giles was the standard romanized system for Chinese even pinyin was introduced in 1958. Current pinyin names are included in parentheses.
- 1st (May 1922 – May 1925)
- Teng Chung-hsia (Deng Zhongxia)
- 2nd (May 1925 – May 1926)
- Lin Wêi-min (Lin Weimin) (ACFTU officially formed)
- 3rd (May 1926 – June 1927)
- Su Chao-chêng (Su Zhaozheng)
- 4th (June 1927 – November 1929)
- Su Chao-cheng (Su Zhaozheng)
- 5th (November 1929 – August 1948)
- Hsiang Ying (Xiang Ying)
- 6th (August 1948 – May 1953)
- Liu Shao-chi (Liu Shaoqi) (honorary)
- Ch'ên Yün (Chen Yun)
- 7th (May 1953 – December 1957)
- Liu Shao-chi (Liu Shaoqi) (honorary)
- Lai Jo-yu (Lai Ruoyu)
- 8th (December 1957 – December 1966)
- Lai Jo-yu (Lai Ruoyu) (December 1957 – May 1958)
- Liu Ning-yi (Liu Ningyi) (August 1958 – December 1966)
- 9th (October 1978 – October 1983)
- Ni Chi-fu (Ni Zhifu)
- 10th (October 1983 – October 1988)
- Ni Chi-fu (Ni Zhifu)
- 11th (October 1988 – October 1993)
- Ni Zhifu
- 12th (October 1993 – October 1998)
- Wei Jianxing
- 13th (October 1998 – October 2003)
- Wei Jianxing (October 1998 – December 2002)
- Wang Zhaoguo (December 2002 – October 2003)
- 14th (October 2003 – October 2008)
- Wang Zhaoguo
- 15th (October 2008 – October 2013)
- Wang Zhaoguo (− March 2013)
- Li Jianguo (March 2013 – October 2013)
- 16th (October 2013 – October 2018)
- Li Jianguo (− March 2018)
- Wang Dongming (March 2018 – October 2018)
- 17th (October 2018 –)
- Wang Dongming
References
References
- "王晓峰:全国已建基层工会282.9万个 覆盖职工会员3.02亿人--中国工会新闻--人民网".
- link. (7 August 2008 , [[The Economist]], 31 July 2008)
- (2005). "Trade Unions of the World". John Harper Publishing.
- (2007). "Is the ACFTU a Union and Does it Matter?". [[Journal of Industrial Relations]].
- Lee, Lao To (1986): Trade Unions in China 1949 to the Present. Singapore University Press
- who had ordered the execution of thousands of CCP cadres and their sympathizers as part of a [[Shanghai massacre. crackdown on Communism.]] All Communist Party-led unions were banned and replaced with [[Company union. yellow unions]] loyal to him (e.g. the "[[Chinese Federation of Labor]]," which has since reformed into an independent union).Traub-Merz, Rudolf (2011): All China Federation of Trade Unions: Structure, Functions and the Challenge of Collective Bargaining. International Labor Office
- Li, David Daokui. (2024). "China's World View: Demystifying China to Prevent Global Conflict". [[W. W. Norton & Company]].
- (2011). "The Role of the All China Federation of Trade Unions: Implications for Chinese Workers Today". WorkingUSA: The Journal of Labor and Society.
- "National Congress of All-China Federation of Trade Unions opens". China Daily.
- (10 October 2018). "Why is the Communist Party telling the All-China Federation of Trade Unions to reform?". CLB.
- Zhang, Angela Huyue. (2024). "High Wire: How China Regulates Big Tech and Governs Its Economy". [[Oxford University Press]].
- Lin, Shuanglin. (2022). "China's Public Finance: Reforms, Challenges, and Options". [[Cambridge University Press]].
- Hammond, Ken. (2023). "China's Revolution and the Quest for a Socialist Future". 1804 Books.
- "Morning Star".
- "ICFTU China policy". ICFTU.
- (January 1993). "Workers in the Tiananmen Protests: The Politics of the Beijing Workers' Autonomous Federation". The Australian Journal of Chinese Affairs.
- "The Forgotten Socialists of Tiananmen Square". Jacobin Magazine.
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