On one hand, there
is no doubt that U.S. companies have a major presence in China. In 1997,
of the $45.3 billion in direct foreign investments made in China, investment by
U.S. companies was second only to that of Hong Kong. Of the total foreign
investment, 62 percent went into funding 14,716 new manufacturing
facilities. Today U.S. companies import a full 36 percent of China’s total exports worldwide. On the other hand, can we believe the
U.S. corporations when they claim that they have improved human and worker
rights conditions in China? Unfortunately, we cannot. Their record
all too clearly demonstrates otherwise.
Recent in-depth investigations of 16 factories in China producing car stereos,
bikes, shoes, sneakers, clothing, TVs, hats and bags for some of the
largest U.S. companies clearly demonstrate that Wal-Mart, Nike, Huffy and others and their contractors in China continue to
systematically violate the most fundamental human and worker rights, while
paying below subsistence wages. The U.S. companies and their contractors
operate with impunity in China, often in open collaboration with repressive and
corrupt local government authorities.
Take Wal-Mart for example, the largest retailer in the world and the largest
importer of goods into the United States. The best estimate is that
Wal-Mart uses 1,000 contractors in China, with factories hidden across the
country. (We can only estimate this, because Wal-Mart refuses to provide
the American people with even a list of the factories the company uses in China
to make the goods we purchase--though Wal-Mart does provide the same information
to the government of China!)
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Recently we discovered Kathie Lee handbags being made for Wal-Mart at the Qin Shi factory, where 1,000 workers were being held under conditions of indentured servitude, forced to work 12 to 14 hours a day, seven days a week, with only one day off a month, while earning an average wage of 3 cents an hour. However, even after months of work, 46 percent of the workers surveyed earned nothing at all--in fact they owed money to the company. The workers were allowed out of the factory for just an hour and a half a day. The workers were fed two dismal meals a day and housed 16 people to one small, crammed dorm room. Many of the workers did not even have enough money to pay for bus fare to leave the factory to look for other work. And when the workers protested being forced to work from 7:30 a.m. to 11:00 p.m., seven days a week, for literally pennies an hour, 800 workers were fired.
Nike is another example, with approximately 50 contractors in China, employing more than 110,000 workers. One can see the “swoosh” and “Just Do It” slogan painted on the walls of Nike’s contractor’s factory, Sewon, right behind the locked metal gate and the iron bars and grates covering the windows. People in the community told us that the young workers are paid 20 cents an hour and work 11 to 12-hour shifts. Also, they explained, they factory will not hire anyone over 25 years of age.
At the Hung Wah factory, young women work from 7:30 a.m. to 10:30 p.m., seven days a week, sewing Nike clothing for an average wage of 22 cents an hour.
At the Keng Tau Handbag company, young women work seven days a week during the busy season sewing Nike bags and backpacks from 8:00 a.m. to 10:00 p.m., receiving just one day off a month. Some workers earned as little as 8 cents an hour. To hide the amount of illegal overtime hours, factory managers told the workers not to punch their time cards for night or Sunday work.
A recruitment ad for the Lizhan factory where New Balance sneakers are
made advertised for “Females only, age 18-25.” The base wage at the
factory is 18 cents an hour, and the workers need permission to leave the
factory grounds. Factory and dorms--where 20 women share one small
dorm room, sleeping on triple-level bunk beds--are locked down at 9:00
p.m. every night. When workers in the polishing section could no
longer stand the grueling overtime hours and low pay and went on strike,
they were all fired. Factory management then lectured the remaining
workers that they would not tolerate unions, strikes, bad behavior or the
raising of grievances.
Far from defending human rights, the record shows that U.S. companies and their contractors in China are actively involved in the systematic denial of worker rights. U.S. companies are milking a system that does not allow for dissent and where anyone trying to form an independent union will be fired, arrested and imprisoned for 5 to 8 years without a trial.
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There is no doubt that U.S. companies are in the front lines in
China, importing for example 1.2 billion garments a year made in China,
as well as shoes, sneakers, toys and sporting goods made in China that
will retail in the U.S. for over $39 billion a year. But the fastest
growing U.S. imports from China are computers and computer parts, which
are increasing by 74 percent each year; phones and other telecommunications
equipment which are up 72 percent annually, and electrical goods which
are up by 127.6 percent.
Far from defending human rights, the record shows that U.S.
companies and their contractors in China are actively involved in the systematic
denial of worker rights. U.S. companies are milking a system
that does not allow for dissent and where anyone trying to form an independent
union will be fired, arrested and imprisoned for 5 to 8 years without a
trial.
Just ask Liu Dingkui about labor rights in China. He was arrested in
January 1999 for organizing a demonstration of 500 steelworkers demanding
back wages from the state-owned Peijiang Iron and Steel factory in Jiangyou
City. He is now serving 1 ½ years in a hard labor camp for
“re-education.”
Or, ask Zhang Shanguang who was sentenced on December 27, 1998 to 10
years imprisonment for “supplying intelligence to organizations outside
China.” He had filed stories with foreign radio stations describing
widespread labor and peasant unrest in his home county of Shupu.
The list goes on.
There are no workers rights in China, and U.S. companies are, unfortunately,
a part of the problem.
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How the Research Was Done |
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China is a hot topic these days, as it should be. China is currently the world’s seventh largest economy and may well be the world’s largest in the next 25 years. What happens in China will have a profound impact in shaping the global economy and determining whether or not fair trade will be linked to respect for human and worker rights and payment of living wages. Yet, despite the vast importance of China’s position there is precious little known about the role of U.S. multinational corporations in China, and about conditions in their own and their contractors’ factories. This research project was undertaken to help fill this enormous void. The research for “Made in China” began in March 1999, and will continue into the future. |
despite the vast importance of China’s position there is precious little known about the role of U.S. multi- national corporations in China |
This is just the first of a series of planned reports
documenting factory conditions and the struggle of workers in China to
win their rights. Hopefully, this report will provide more than just documentation on factory conditions. We hope that it will also help build an active international solidarity movement in the United States to support the workers’ struggle for human and worker rights in China. |
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Does it get better with other U.S. companies? |
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