2 datasets found
  1. T

    China Average Weekly Hours

    • tradingeconomics.com
    • fa.tradingeconomics.com
    • +12more
    csv, excel, json, xml
    Updated Mar 14, 2024
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    TRADING ECONOMICS (2024). China Average Weekly Hours [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/china/average-weekly-hours
    Explore at:
    csv, json, xml, excelAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2024
    Dataset authored and provided by
    TRADING ECONOMICS
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Jan 31, 2022 - Oct 31, 2025
    Area covered
    China
    Description

    Average Weekly Hours in China decreased to 48.40 Hours in October from 48.60 Hours in September of 2025. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for China Average Weekly Hours.

  2. R

    Data from: The Age Twist in Employers' Gender Requests: Evidence from Four...

    • dataverse.iza.org
    • datasets.iza.org
    docx, zip
    Updated Nov 6, 2023
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    Peter J. Kuhn; Shen, Kailing; Miguel Delgado Helleseter; Peter J. Kuhn; Shen, Kailing; Miguel Delgado Helleseter (2023). The Age Twist in Employers' Gender Requests: Evidence from Four Job Boards [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.15185/izadp.9891.1
    Explore at:
    zip(66854), docx(44055), zip(1534971)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 6, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Research Data Center of IZA (IDSC)
    Authors
    Peter J. Kuhn; Shen, Kailing; Miguel Delgado Helleseter; Peter J. Kuhn; Shen, Kailing; Miguel Delgado Helleseter
    License

    https://www.iza.org/wc/dataverse/IIL-1.0.pdfhttps://www.iza.org/wc/dataverse/IIL-1.0.pdf

    Time period covered
    2008 - 2010
    Area covered
    Mexico, China
    Description

    When permitted by law, employers sometimes state the preferred age and gender of their employees in job ads. The researchers study the interaction of advertised requests for age and gender on one Mexican and three Chinese job boards, showing that firms’ explicit gender requests shift dramatically away from women and towards men when firms are seeking older (as opposed to younger) workers. This ‘age twist’ in advertised gender preferences occurs in all four of our datasets and survives controls for occupation, firm, and job title fixed effects. Chinese Data The two new Chinese data sources used are job boards serving the city of Xiamen. In part because Xiamen was one of the five economic zones established immediately after China’s 1979 economic reforms, it is highly modernized relative to other Chinese cities, with an economy based on electronics, machinery and chemical engineering. One of these job boards, XMZYJS (the Xia-Zhang-Quan city public job board) is operated directly by government employees of the local labor bureau. Like state-operated Job Centers in the U.S., XMZYJS has a history as a brick-and-mortar employment service. XMZYJS’s mandate is to serve the less-skilled portion of the area’s labor market, and operates purely as a jobposting service: workers cannot post resumes or apply to jobs on the site. In fact, while XMZYJS now posts all its job ads online, many of these ads are viewed in XMZYJS‘s offices by workers who visit in person. This is done both on individual computer terminals and on a large electronic wall display. Applications are made by calling the company that placed the ad or by coming to a specific window on XMZYJS’s premises that has been reserved by the employer at a posted date and time. The second Xiamen-based job board, XMRC , is a for-profit, privately-operated company that is sponsored by the local government. Its mandate is to serve the market for skilled workers in the Xiamen metropolitan area. XMRC operates like a typical U.S. job board: both job ads and resumes are posted online, workers can submit applications to specific jobs via the site, and firms can contact individual workers through the site as well. By design, XMZYJS aggregates job postings from all local and specialized job boards for less-skilled workers in the metropolitan area, and XMRC is the main job board for skilled workers in the area. While there is potentially some cross-posting of job ads across the two sites, descriptive statistics on the types of jobs on offer suggest the sites do, indeed, serve very different populations. Like all our data sets, XMZYJS and XMRC serve private sector employers almost exclusively. Recruiting for public sector jobs, and most recruiting for State-Owned-Enterprises (SOEs) takes place via a different process. The third Chinese database represents Zhaopin as the third-largest Internet job board in China; it operates nationally and serves workers who on average are considerably more skilled than even those on XMRC. This sample is based on all unique ads posted in four five-week observation periods in 2008-2010. In contrast to XMRC and XMZYJS where the data were supplied by the job boards, the Zhaopin data were collected by a web crawler. The sample is based on all unique ads posted in four five-week observation periods in 2008-2010. The Chinese data have 141,188, 39,727, and 1,051,038 ads in the XMZYJS, XMRC and Zhaopin samples respectively. Mexican Data The Mexican data allows to ascertain whether main results extend to a nation with different economic conditions, labor market institutions and culture. The Mexican data is a sample of job ads posted on Computrabajo. Of the new data sets explored, the Computrabajo data are most similar to Zhaopin in the sense that they come from a national online site that disproportionately serves highly skilled workers. To construct an analysis sample from the Computrabajo website, the authors collected advertisements daily for approximately 18 months between early 2011 and mid-2012 using a web crawler. Both the standardized fields and the open text portions of each ad were parsed to extract variables for the analysis. Computrabajo analysis sample contains 90,487 ads.

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TRADING ECONOMICS (2024). China Average Weekly Hours [Dataset]. https://tradingeconomics.com/china/average-weekly-hours

China Average Weekly Hours

China Average Weekly Hours - Historical Dataset (2022-01-31/2025-10-31)

Explore at:
3 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
csv, json, xml, excelAvailable download formats
Dataset updated
Mar 14, 2024
Dataset authored and provided by
TRADING ECONOMICS
License

Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically

Time period covered
Jan 31, 2022 - Oct 31, 2025
Area covered
China
Description

Average Weekly Hours in China decreased to 48.40 Hours in October from 48.60 Hours in September of 2025. This dataset includes a chart with historical data for China Average Weekly Hours.

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