The employment relationships in the Chinese context have attracted growing scholarly interests and research efforts. The efforts to understand the complexity of the Chinese employment and Chinese employees' experiences at work have led to several recent special issues in some privileged journals in the field of management and organization behaviour (e.g., Human Relations, 2015; Journal of Organizational Behavior, 2015). In this paper, we introduce an indigenous definition of atypical workers in China, inspired by an overlooked Chinese employment phenomenon, recently brought into the English literature by Ma (2018), wherein workplace inequality is implicit in the employment relationship. Unfair workplace practices in China are often referred to as 'unequal pay for equal work' (同工不同酬) between certain groups of workers involving particularly non-permanent workers by Chinese scholars (e.g., Wang, 2012; Xu, Zeng & Ji, 2013; Zhang, 2013). It is an upshot of unequal social life resulting from structural implications (for overviews, see Peng, 2009; also see Burns, 1977). For the purpose of this paper, we will focus on an organizational manifestation of this social inequality at workplace between workers in a single organisation. It began by a brief history of transformations in the Chinese labour laws and industrial relations and moved on to compare and contrast the use of alternative employment arrangements in the West and China, leading to an analysis of the inevitable workplace unfairness between certain groups of Chinese workers and the nature of the injustice. We conclude with discussion of the implications for the theories and research. 2. Chinese Labour Law and the Employment Transformation Before 1978, labour policies were under a command system (see Zhou, 1955). Lifetime employment was mandatory (Si, Wei & Li, 2008) thus 'contract-free', i.e., the 'Iron Rice Bowl' (Wang, 2008). Under the 'Iron Rice Bowl' system, workers were employed by state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and collectively owned enterprises with guaranteed permanent employments and the cradle-to-grave benefit system, including wage, welfare provision, and job security. Under this socialism employment relationship started from 1950s, 'companies' (公司) rarely existed, in whose place has been 'unit' (单位) whereby employees have been administered by centrally planned wages ('Iron Wage') and state-controlled job appointments and promotions ('Iron Chair') (i.e., the 'Old Three Iron', see Bray, 2005). The idea of 'dual-system' (双轨制), i.e., a duality of centralised planning supplemented by contracts, was proposed and trialed by the then Vice-President Liu Shaoqi in 1956 (see Chong, 1958); but it was only promoted by the Ministry of Labour in 1983 (Notice on Actively Promoting Labour Contracts, 1983). By then, only 650,000 workers were on employment contracts; a year later, the number increased to 40 million (Liu & Lu, 1996). In 1986, the Temporary Regulations on the Labour Contract was trialed and, in 1994, passed as the National Labour Law. A year later, this ...