Nation worked up over days off
Updated: 2013-12-07 06:53
By Raymond Zhou (China Daily)
|
|||||||||||
|
Dama dames: China's secret weapon |
Hit litterbugs with fines, not insults |
Calibrating the holiday schedule has been a discreet exercise in democracy, and people are realizing that there is no perfect choice, only an optimal one determined by a majority.
The recent online vote on the 2014 schedule of China's public holidays was enlightening in many ways. Most of all, it shows there is give and take in every decision. Here are the three choices proposed by the National Holiday Office on Nov 27:
Plan A: Chinese New Year (Spring Festival) will be seven days off, including four days from adjoining weekends. National Day (Oct 1) will have three days off, with no shuffling of weekends. New Year's Day, Qingming, Labor Day, and Duanwu and Mid-Autumn festivals will each be one day off.
Plan B: National Day will have five consecutive days off, including a weekend. The rest will be the same as Plan A.
Plan C: Same as Plan A, except National Day, like the Spring Festival, will have seven days off, including four weekend days.
Plan C received the majority of votes, varying from 50 percent to 60 percent on different websites, which, if adopted, means 2014 will be pretty much the same as 2013 in the arrangement of civic holidays.
For more coverages by Raymond Zhou, click here
Related Stories
It's not thought, but cash, that counts 2013-10-12 10:00
Leftover women or an unappreciated feast? 2013-09-28 08:51
Lost for words 2013-08-31 02:56
Raymond Zhou: Montreal Journal, August 23 2013-08-24 10:57
Not music to their ears 2013-08-17 08:30
Today's Top News
Nations to jointly tap nuclear markets
Xi leads China's tributes to Mandela
Smog gives expats second thoughts
CSRC to boost IPO reform plan
Li holds talks with French PM
UK set to OK Huawei cyber center
New cargo flight builds bonds with Russia
Broader economic prospects pursued
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Against a sea of troubles |
David Cameron's China visit |
Beyond 'panda diplomacy' |
The way of kindness |
Attention on future reform agenda |
A second opportunity |