March 28, 2012
China Beyond the Stereotypes
Transition From the Sweatshop of the World
For many the Retraction of the Apple story
by This American Life turned Apple from a labor abuser into a
corporation with best practices. Others saw this as a proof of yet
another corporate cover-up and PR campaign by Apple. Meanwhile, American
involvement in workplace abuses in China remains under a thick veil of
ambiguity for the public.
China defies stereotypes.
In the past 30 years, China helped create an economic model that
relied on low wages and labor standards, and militarized production
units. That model is however in transition now. Workplace practices and
labor rights are improving, although unevenly and slowly. Chinese
factories and their labor standards are diverse and evolving. China has
production units with 19th century labor practices, and modern factories
like Foxconn that pay better wages, and have more acceptable living
conditions for their workers. Human rights violations of workers however
continue in different degrees in the worst, and the best factories.
Wages have sharply increased in recent years. In Shenzhen, wages more
than tripled from an average of $70 a month in 2005, to $240 in 2012.
Despite improvements in wages, the militaristic organization of
workplaces remains even in the most modern enterprises.
In the early days of economic reform, some suppliers of large
American firms in Shenzhen and surrounding cities had private jails on
the factory compound. Detaining the trouble makers and physically
abusing them was common. There were rare extreme cases.
Militant workers disappeared. A strike leader was found dead with a bullet in his head on the roof of a Taiwanese shoe factory supplying a major American brand in the mid 1990s.
Years later, in Shenzhen, a manager of the factory from that time told me the story off the record. “This is very dangerous,” he said.
Militant workers disappeared. A strike leader was found dead with a bullet in his head on the roof of a Taiwanese shoe factory supplying a major American brand in the mid 1990s.
Years later, in Shenzhen, a manager of the factory from that time told me the story off the record. “This is very dangerous,” he said.
Such cases of extreme violence are no longer practiced, but fear
reigns even in factories supplying American brands. Factory prisons have
all but disappeared. Strike leaders and militant workers are not
detained. They are penalized and fired routinely. “This is everyone’s
secret. The Hong Kong people know it. The Taiwanese know it. The
Mainland Chinese know it. The only people who pretend not to know it are
the American buyers,” the manager told me.
The owner of a medium-size chemical company supplying a leading
American retailer explained how he dealt with a potential strike in
2005. He asked his workers to appoint representatives to negotiate with
him. Four workers stepped forward. He fired all four the next day. There
was no strike. The work stoppage would have prevented him from getting
his shipment ready for the U.S market. “I get charged for late
delivery,” he said.
While China’s labor practices improve, the pressure to deliver on
time remains inescapable for most subcontractors. With the option to
shop around and contract with the most reliable and cheapest supplier,
the American buyers demand uninterrupted and on time delivery. Late
delivery is costly to the subcontractors. American buyers make the local
producer pay for the air freight if they are late in their delivery, an
employee of a Chinese
trading company told me.
trading company told me.
The demand for timely and fast delivery is more acute for those
supplying major brands like Apple. The maddening race to meet delivery
deadlines for iPhones, iPads, and similar products puts Foxconn workers
under insufferable stress. The spate of workers’ suicides in the past
couple of years is revealing. Foxconn responded by installing safety
nets in some of its establishments in Shenzhen. It recently increased
the wage of some of its workers to $400 a month, more than $100 above the
government-set minimum in Shenzhen. The nets prevent death, but do not
remove the underlying causes of the suicide attempts. Higher wages
matter a lot, but they don’t change the militaristic management style
that has been pushing workers to the edge.
“A factory needs discipline. It would seize to exist otherwise,” the
owner of the chemical company told me. For this, he relied on factory
guards. They maintained order, and gave a “good beating” to those
workers who stole from others and caused problems. I told him that the
thieves are handed over to the police in the United States.” In China,
we beat them up first, and then give them to the police,” he said
laughing.
These practices are also changing, most visibly in large
export-processing enterprises. The rising confidence of the Chinese
workers and sporadic job actions has put Beijing on alert. Eager to
avoid social instability, and hoping to transform the international
image of China as the sweatshop of the world, the government has been
supporting legislation to improve labor conditions. Low-wage
export-processing industrialization is slowly giving way to higher value
added exports, and the development of an expanding domestic market and a
middle class society. Improving workplace practices and labor standards
is integral to this process. The Chinese economic transition is in
transition.
BEHZAD YAGHMAIAN is a professor of political economy at Ramapo College of New Jersey, and the author of Embracing the Infidel: Stories of Muslim Migrants on the Journey West and the forthcoming The Accidental Capitalist: A People’s Story of the New China (March 2012). He can be reached at behzad.yaghmaian@gmail.com.