China Unveils Landmark Gig Economy Policy to Protect Millions of Workers by 2027

April 26, 2026
China Unveils Landmark Gig Economy Policy to Protect Millions of Workers by 2027
  • China has formalised its first comprehensive policy framework governing gig workers in the platform economy, covering delivery riders and online livestreamers, with a target to standardise practices by 2027.

  • The framework sets a 2027 compliance deadline to standardise labour practices across the platform economy and focuses on major players like Meituan, Didi, Alibaba’s Ele.me, JD.com, and SF Express.

  • With tens of millions of workers in delivery, ride-hailing, e-commerce, and live commerce, the policy aims to standardise labour practices across the gig sector by 2027.

  • Platforms must improve working conditions and consult worker representatives before making decisions affecting livelihoods, strengthening worker voice in governance.

  • Algorithms governing onboarding, task assignment, pay, hours, and incentives must be developed and regularly revised, with negotiations to include worker representatives or unions; the algorithm itself becomes a subject of collective bargaining.

  • Platforms must ensure at least a local minimum wage, enforce maximum working hours via the app, prohibit further dispatches after limits are reached, and push rest reminders to workers.

  • The policy seeks to strengthen oversight of platform algorithms by increasing transparency and promoting the use of AI and IoT to optimise algorithmic systems.

  • It advocates using artificial intelligence and the Internet of Things to optimise, not exploit, gig workers’ algorithmic systems.

  • Major tech platforms like Meituan, Alibaba, JD.com, and various logistics operators are required to align pay with labour intensity and curb excessive commissions.

  • Tech platforms and logistics operators must align pay with labour intensity, reduce excessive commissions, and improve working conditions.

  • Employment contracts or written agreements are required where employment conditions exist or are uncertain, and platforms must publicly display labour rules at least seven days before they take effect.

  • Early corporate responses include subsidies and social security commitments from major players, though the enforcement and delivery of benefits remain uncertain.

Summary based on 3 sources


Get a daily email with more Startups stories

More Stories