China HR managers fret about late nights (Reuters) Updated: 2006-06-07 14:00
Chinese human resources managers are biting their nails ahead of the World
Cup, worried about the effect of successive late nights on their staff, a
Shanghai newspaper said on Wednesday.
China is six hours ahead of Germany, meaning many of the games which start on
Friday will be shown live in the early hours of the morning.
"More than 70 percent of those surveyed said they thought the World Cup would
influence company business, while 20 percent said they were nervous about the
event's arrival," the Shanghai Daily said, quoting a survey conducted by
ChinaHR.com, a leading headhunter.
China is becoming obsessed with football, a sport it has yet to conquer at
the international level while its domestic league is rife.
It is also becoming big business, driven by such sporting pin-ups as
England's David Beckham and Michael Owen, whose images grace billboards across
the country.
"China has a massive number of football fans who will stay up to watch the
matches, and I'm one of them," Premier Wen Jiabao told German Chancellor Angela
Merkel on her visit to Beijing last month.
One Qingdao-based company thinks it has the answer to keep its staff in line
-- it will fine latecomers, the newspaper said.
Other firms have chosen a middle path -- either allowing workers to opt for
flexitime or, in the case of a U.S. chemicals company, encouraging sales reps to
watch the matches of their clients' countries, so allowing them to come in late
the next day.
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