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We Shop Until Chinese Workers Drop
She Was Expected To Work 360 Days a Year From 7.30am to 9.30pm With Only a Half-Hour Break
Over the past decade, an old word once used in the Maoist gulags has come back to China. It is "gulaosi" - and it is used to describe the men and women who are literally being worked to death producing clothes, electronics and toys for you and me.
Wie Meiren was a standard-issue gulaosi, the kind you can find in every Chinese town. She was a 32-year-old woman with three kids who left her hungry village and travelled to Dongkeng, where she got a job assembling the toy cars for the British kids' market.
There, she was expected to work 360 days a year, from 7.30am to as late as 9.30pm, with only a half-hour break for lunch and fines for taking too long on the toilet. As in many Chinese factories, military drills were often yelled: "Long live the company!" If anybody argued back to the managers, they could be punched in the face.
One day, Meiren had a family crisis at home. She was forbidden by her bosses from going to take care of it - so she became angry and fainted. She forced herself to keep going to work for the next fortnight, but eventually she became so exhausted she collapsed - and died before she reached the hospital. The autopsy indicated gulaosi - heart and organ failure caused by extreme exhaustion.
Some 50,000 fingers are sliced off in China's factories every month. Tao Chun Lan was a 20-year-old woman from Sichuan province at the heart of China who moved to Shenzhen and got a job working in a handicrafts factory. One night, she discovered the factory was filling with smoke - and the workers were locked inside. Some 84 workers were burned or trampled to death. Lan jumped out of a window, irreparably damaging her legs. She has received no compensation. "They don't care if I am crippled for life," she says.
Last year, the Chinese dictatorship announced a new draft of labour laws designed finally to allow Chinese workers like her - too late - some basic rights.
The new law would permit people like Lan and Meiren to join trade unions. It would give them the right to a written contract. It would give them the right to a severance payment. It would give them the right to change jobs freely. Where previously China's labour rules were diffuse, dispersed and barely enforced, now they would be drawn together and backed with big fines.
The dissident-killing Chinese Communist Party didn't propose this change out of a sudden flush of benevolence. They did it because the Chinese people have in increasing numbers been refusing to be tethered serfs for the benefit of Western corporations. Last year, there were 300,000 illegal industrial actions in China, a huge spate of "factory kidnappings" of managers, and more than 85,000 protests.
The Chinese people were showing they did not want to leap from a Maoist gulag to a market-fundamentalists' sweatshop. They demanded a sensible compromise: strong trade and markets to generate wealth, matched by strong trade unions to stop markets devouring them. They want an end to grinding poverty, but one that doesn't kill them as they get there.
But they bumped into a huge obstacle. Groups representing Western corporations with factories in China sent armies of lobbyists to Beijing to cajole and threaten the dictatorship into abandoning these new workers' protections.
The American Chamber of Commerce - representing Microsoft, Nike, Ford, Dell and others - listed 42 pages of objections. The laws were "unaffordable" and "dangerous", they declared. The European Chamber of Commerce backed them up.
This is not the first time big business has militated to prevent basic freedoms from being extended to China. Bill Clinton came to office promising "an America that will not coddle dictators, from Beijing to Baghdad", and at first, he acted on this rhetoric, issuing an executive order that decreed trade with China could only grow if China in tandem increased its respect for human rights. Enraged American business executives subjected him to nuclear-strength lobbying - so Clinton ditched his executive order after a year.
Ever since, Western governments have been justifying business with the Chinese dictatorship by saying our corporations and trade would inevitably and inexorably bring greater freedom to China.
But now the corporations that they claimed would bring freedom and democracy are in fact lobbying to crush freedom and opposing the plain democratic will of the Chinese people. As James Mann, the former Los Angeles Times bureau chief in Beijing, puts it after years of observing the behaviour of big business in China: "The business communities of China and the United States [and, he might have added, Europe] do not harbour dreams of democracy. Both profit from a Chinese system that permits no political opposition, and both are content with it."
Their lobbying seems to have paid off. The (unelected) Chinese National People's Congress is due to vote on the new labour laws in the next month or so, but the proposals have already been massively watered down.
Scott Slipy, the director of human resources for Microsoft in China, bragged to BusinessWeek, "We have enough investment at stake that we can usually get someone to listen to us if we are passionate about an issue."
It seems that Maoism is fine so long as its dictatorial urges are put to the service of Bill Gates and other billionaires, rather than one psychotic dictator.
These Western corporations are explicitly seeking a China where a tiny number of extremely rich people are free to organise, but the vast majority of poor people are physically prevented from doing so by the state.
Of course, these market fundamentalist economists claim this situation is in fact good for the Chinese people, because this system is the best way to enrich them. The obvious response is: let them decide. If they don't want to join trade unions, if they don't want workplace protections, nobody will force them. But give them the freedom to choose. Or are these economists saying the Chinese people are too stupid to know their own interests?
The American and European campaigns showing that we are not all willing to accept their serfdom and profit from it have already had successes. The European Chamber of Commerce has been shamed into retracting its initial opposition to the laws. After lobbying from trade unions and human rights organisations, Nike has now denounced the position of the American Chambers of Commerce to which it belongs and backed the law. The remaining Wal-Martian corporations need to be damned one by one - and subject to legal sanctions - until they relent and accept the rights of Chinese workers.
For the sake of millions of people like Lan and Meiren, we need to show these corporations that we refuse to shop until they drop.
© 2007 The Independent
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62 Comments so far
Show AllI am very concerned about this issue-and of course the fifty year annexation of Tibet by the Chinese mafioso marketeers.
A government with some moral backbone would halt all trade with China-until a comprehensive, and practiced, human rights
agenda is followed-and Tibet is free from any Chinese interference.
Pure slavery that appeals to Bush's base because of low salaries, little overhead and theey can pollute the universe at will.
This example in China puts the lie to the fundamental promises of neoliberalism. It demonstrates beyond any doubt that neoliberalism is pure fraud that is perpetrated by heartless economic elites to enrich themselves and for no other reason.
No one should ever again claim markets or capitalism act as facilitators for political freedom.
The socialists are right after all.
These people may be better off staying in their starving?? villages. I think they may be falling for consumerism. They have lived an agrarian life for over three thousand years and know how to live off the land. It may be a tough life but after Peak Oil and other awaiting disasters, those of us left are all going to wish we knew how to live off the land like they do.
Imagine a country where the workers would be permitted to join trade unions... have the right to a written contract... the right to severance payment... the right to change jobs freely.
The corporate lobbyists have NOT just pressured China to drop such nonsense... they have systematically pressured AMERICAN politicians to dispose of such protections for the workers here too.
This kind of treachery is not just limited to the Republican Party either... they have had substantial cooperation from both sides of the aisle, prompting some of us to call for re-establishment of something akin to Teddy Roosevelt's "Bull Moose" Party... which was founded "calling for vigorous government intervention to protect the people from the selfish interests."
"To destroy this invisible Government, to dissolve the unholy alliance between corrupt business and corrupt politics is the first task of the statesmanship of the day." - (1912 Progressive Party Platform.)
Roosevelt lost that year, but there is some belief that he would have won had the Party only concentrated on the Presidency.
On the other hand, MANY of the issues backed by the Progressive Party eventually passed in Congress, including Women's Sufferage, breaking up of the Trusts and monopolies that were busting unions, workers rights, etc.
Today's politicians and their keepers have set up a near bullet-proof system for keeping themselves in office with the massive increase in the number of corporate lobbyists and corporate nipples on which the politicians can feed... and the consolidation of news media under just a few corporate thumbs.
In the end, the workers lose and will continue to lose ground until such time that the politicians
Human life has become a commodity in terms of capitalism. Human value is now determined by how much it can produce. Those at the bottom of the world's society will be just a number on an accounting sheet for a big corporation.
American society, by its accepted lifestyles, is partly responsible for what is happening all over the world, not just in China.
When I was a kid my parents would tell me to eat all the food on my plate because some poor kid in China was hungry. No maybe we would hear something different. "You better play with that toy because some kid in China died to make it."
Hoa Binh
The soulution to this 'crsis' is simple. Stop buying stuff. I did just that many years ago after a visit to swall mart to pick up a few groceries and a new can opener. The can opener would not open a can. I took it back for replacement and guess what, the replacement can opener would not open a can. That was it. No more buying junk. I dug out my old GI can opener and am still using it.
My wife and I have been driving the same vehicles for seven years. The vehicles get the correct maintence and on a regular basis. They are as good as new and we will drive them till the wheels fall off. Before our current vehicles we had a pair that lasted eleven years. Same with appliances. Just because some couple down the block spends fifty thousand dollars on a 'kitchen makeover' doesnt mean that we have to follow suit.
Pay off your mortage. Pay off your vehicles, Pay off your credit cards. Invest money instead of spending it on junk. You will be suprised how good it feels to not owe anything to anyone. Well, almost. We still have to pay taxes and insurance but they are almost inevetable.
I am in the market for a good food processor. I have heard that Cuisinart is among the best.
I called Cuisinart customer relations and asked where their food processors are manufactured. The lady on the phone said, "All of our products are manufactured in China."
I said, "Well, I guess I won't be buying a Cuisinart."
She said, "OK, bye." It didn't sound like she flinched in the least.
I'm pissed.
As much as I hate to say it or do it, a bit of monkeywrenching is overdue.
The blame is not on American Corporations, afterall they are doing what they are supposed to do and expected to do as capitalist entities.
The Chinese Communist Party is allowing the abuse on their own people. Shame on them
On top of all the pain and suffering the Chinese workers must endure, there is the environmental degradation they must live with. In Beijing or Shanghai the visibility is generally less than a few hundred meters (I visited both cities last Summer). And now we hear that the Yangtze River, one of the greatest rivers in the world (with twice the flow of the Mississippi and just as long as the Mississippi-Missouri), is dead.
With all that the Chinese people have suffered and continue to suffer, the US capitalists are cutting off their hopes for a better life. And this is after US and other capitalists dominated China in the 19th Century and treated the Chinese like vassals in their own land. The British even went so far, in the Opium Wars, to force China to continue to accept the Opium trade, even though it was devastating the Chinese people.
And the Chinese leadership feels compelled to continue along the path of industrialization because otherwise the Western powers could really dominate China to a far greater extent, and that could only be worse.
How evil of a socio-economic-political system have we created?
My response is lengthy, which you can read by going to my website, www.raycarlson.com. Essentially, I talk about the crossroads we face in America between true democracy and corporatism.
www.raycarlson.com
American corporations control our government and they can control the government in China. The United States of Everything is run by corporations.
Hoa Binh
Fire uncontrolled destroys us. Controlled it cooks our food. Corporations uncontrolled destroy us too. Controlled, they bring economies of scale.
A few people can't control raging fires. But all of us can.
A few politicians can't control conglomerates. But all of us can if we vote for the grassroots Greens and for Mike Gravel.
Those who need a kidney travel to china and a prisoner is killed and his organs are sold for profit.
Recently I saw a photo of an exhausted woman packing broccoli in a Chinse plant- outside the river was a polluted mess- that broccoli is sent to the US and we don't ahve the guts to complain because China is funding the war in Iraq- we have spent the 5 trillion left behind by Bill Clinton and we are borrowing from China.
Last but not least, an exhibit of plastic bodies is shown in New York City to rave reviews- people pay top dollars to see the remains of somebody who was killed to encase him/her in plastic.
Also the melamine contanmination of the petfood industry has been practiced in China for years- the feed is mixed with nitrogen which has nothing to do with proteins and is just mixed in to deceive- nobody complains- New York Times said that soya sauce was made from human hair. Why are we sitting by without objecting? Again because we need this stupid stuff at low prices from China - how dumb- our dumps are overflowing with the garbage and our own businessmen are bankcrupt giving way to one more Walmart.
ragnarok,
Our corporations are just doing what they are supposed to do? That is engaging in and perpetuating slave labor and polluting the earth to maximize profits (all the time hurting workers in the US)? So US corporations are supposed to be monsters and we are not supposed to do anything about it, except to blame the Chinese Communist leaders that we have no control over and we have nothing to do with? That is the biggest crock of nonsense I have ever heard in my life.
kivals
Yes you got part of my message right, US Corporations should and are expected to engage in maximizing profits for their shareholders, so that encourages abuse if they can get away with it.
I never said we should not do anything about it, at least we are discussing the issues here.
Hopefully we Americans will elect politicians decent enough to "force" our corporations to behave; even better we should elect people like Hugo Chaves in Venezuela.
Until then we should not blame just the Capitalist entities because they attempt to do what they were created for.
Is the Chinese Communist Party Communist or not ?
If so they are certainly failing their "Commune" by allowing greedy exploitation of their own folks.
They have the political and military power in China and could stop all the abuses.
ragnarok,
I can't argue with that. The Chinese Communist Party should do a better job, though they do face the pressure of knowing that if they do not keep up technologically, the "shock and awe" US military-corporatist empire will attempt to overwhelm them strategically throughout the world and their people will end up even worse off.
But we really can do very little about the Chinese Communist Party. We can do much more about the corporatists here, and we must. Their evil seems to know no bounds. They might not gas people and put them in ovens (that would shock too many and cause a strong reaction), but they kill millions slowly, insidiously, quietly, secretly, out of the way of the spotlight, and with plausible deniability. This world has rarely witnessed such evil.
Of course the government in China is not Communistic. And our government is not Democratic. Both societies are run by and for the rich. It's not the fault of the Chinese people that they have the government they have. And it's not our fault that we have the government that we do. It's the way it's supposed to be.
Hoa Binh
Corporations can be regulated to keep their dark side under control.
Norway has a free market system; but at the same time their population is not abused. They are not allowing greed to run amok like the Chinese are.
Or like Chaves in Venezuela force corporations to share the spoils with the rest. Joint ventures , cooperatives and the like.
The abuses in China are happening because the Chinese Communist Party is allowing it to happen. Shame on them
There's more to it than that. The chinese are buying our junk bonds (which is all we're worth now) and we're buying their junk. This will go on until the Chinese decide to pull the plug and plunge us into third world status and most Americans won't know what hit them because - as David Michael Green puts it so eloquently in his article "One Day You're Gonna Wake Up, America" they're walking around "in a civic coma". The corporations have long since jumped ship on this country, so they are in a win-win situation.
When the Chinese and Indian boats are lifted, then boats will have to be lifted elsewhere, and finally, we have the capitalist utopia - a world of 10 billion gluttons. To keep the capitalist wheel turning after that, economies will have to be destroyed for rebuilding purposes.
The frequency and intensity of military destruction will have to escalate for logarithmic growth to sustain, and nukes will be set off after that, for rebuilding orgies to commence.
COMMON SENSE CHECK: We do not WANT OR NEED economic growth. We want a gradual tapering off of the economy as we learn to make what we need with ever greater efficiency, at the local level, via small independent enterprises.
Forgot to mention, the reason Bush is doing this to us is because if he tried to finance his occupation on American's backs, people would object and make his oil buddies unhappy. As it is, people don't approve, but hey, it's not costing them anything so they aren't paying attention. In the last election, as many people voted against corporate cronyism as against the occupation. And most Americans don't think much more of the Democrats either.
Outsourcing to China not only is bad for Americans, it is bad for the Chinese as well.
stop buying stuff but what you authentically need.
except where absolutely necessary, stop using gasoline and driving the car. "IE drive less than 20 miles per week, no frivolous trips"
stop watching tv and wasting inordinate time on useless information, and otherwise abandon any kinds of harmful mental addictive activities.
stop producing children - for we the lowly citizens have become no more than part of a "numbers game;" expendable beasts on a corporate farm, managed by a cruel and illiterate mob.
what else can we do? not shopping at wal mart does not seem to be enough , i have not shopped there in years and they don't seem to miss me much.
"What else can we do?"
Well, I would have some recommendations:
Look up the world "protest"
Google the word, you probably will find some leads to other nations, maybe in some foreign language, study the language, do what these people did.
Gandhi's "Homespun Movement" --- Stop buying!
correction (obvious)
Look up the word "protest"
Corporations cannot, by law, act in a manner that is in any way detrimental to the dividends of the stockholders. If you read the link below you will see the famous case of Henry Ford vs The Dodge Brothers heard in the Michigan Supreme Court in 1919. Ford was attempting to raise the standard of living of his workers by taking some profits and instead of issuing them as dividends on stock, distribute the profits to his workers. The amount was a very small percentage of Fords' profit. The court found against Ford citing 'the company cannot turn profits into spoilation of assets. The corporation is not a charity.'
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dodge_v._Ford_Motor_Company
So, the corporations have the law on their side once again. Since the courts and the ruling class is stocked with lawyers, economists, and various other elites, what outcome could one expect from the Michigan Supreme Court or any other court in America?
Chinese capitalists of the 21st century operate very much like American capitalists of the 19th century. And 21st century American capitalists are happy to aid and abet them because they are the biggest winners of all.
I was about to post a blistering denunciation of the corporate maltreatment of Chinese workers but then...where was my Mac made? It says "assembled in China." And the same is probably true of my PC as well. The only people who can stop buying stuff are those of us who already have our stuff.
Microsoft and dell have factories in China? Why are they complaining the chinese steal their software and such?
They cannot afford to buy it and do not have the time to use it working 12 hour days.
Evil corporations! Slaves were worked to death in the Roman Empire to dig for gold!
I do not buy their junk! Without a lot of clutter there is less to clean too.
what china really needs now is another red revolution. they have sold out their principles but on the other hand they are no less a superpower.
These people who use the argument that "corporations are doing what they are supposed to be doing, making a profit for their stockholders" seem to neglect the fact that many corporations are taking those profits and splitting them up between the management in the form of bonuses and retirement balloons... robbing their stockholders as well as their employees. $100 million to $400 million retirement packages seem to be the norm these day, rather than the exception.
People who are doing that should be tarred and feathered by their stockholders.
Another way to look at the Chinese worker/slave situation is to assume that China is in the process of undermining the US economy by continuing to loan us money to purchase their junk. If the US continues to purchase their junk and continues to pursue wars that have no return on investment we will be a poor nation in short order. Wars fought by empires must have a return on investment or, at minimum, win a diplomatic objective, otherwise they are ruinious to the empire. The Chinese are known for their patience and are willing to sacrafice many of their people to achieve a long term objective. Perhaps some day we will be attempting to make junk to export to China so that we can reach the standard of living that their long term objective has rendered unto them? You know, the one that we had but frittered away. Our problem is that we spend too much time on bread and circus and too little time on wathcing and COMPREHENDING the moves on the world stage. To turn our situation around we need leaders with brains, vision and guts, not another second rate movie star or spoiled brat.
Good piece.
Corporations are evil because they operate off money and not yenom. "Yenom" is a binding amalgam of profit and social obligation. If all the reserves in the world were converted to yenom, the problem would be solved.
"management in the form of bonuses and retirement balloons… robbing their stockholders as well as their employees."
Thank you for remembering the third party - the employees.
Almost all the discussions in this country ignore the employees Not to mention, of course, the fact that they don't participate
in management.
Walmarts all across the U.S of A are packed every weekend with shoppers buying up all those cheap goods and being proud of the good deals they are finding.
They don't care to understand the real price being paid by millions to save them a few dollars.
I have not shopped in a Wal-mart for years and will not in the future, just for the reasons stated in the article.
Think about it!! Boycott them until they demand better working conditions and better compensation for the many who being exploited in China for the price of cheap toaster.
It goes to the saying, "build a cheaper toaster and they will come" and they do. Without thinking of the consequences for others.
Globalization was created to drive down wages worldwide and create an endless pool of cheap labor for the multinationals.
Obviously, it's not only Walmart.
So, boykotting Walwart only won't help, except for feeling good about oneself. There must be other solutions, such as tariffs,
for example.
Communisim? Capitalism? When? Where?
It's astounding that the so-called "Chinese Communist Party" has subjected the Chinese people to the worst kind of capitalist exploitation! They are totally corrupt and deserve to be overthrown so the people can return to their villages and grow their own food. Farm for family and community and to hell with the market!
Communitarian,
Can I recommend you familiarize yourself with the word "famine."
How do you know that their land can sustain them.
Wouldn't it be nice if you knew anything, anything before you give nations your precious advice.
Multinational corporations have 'decoupled' from America. That is one reason that the stock market continues upward while the US domestic economy is in the doldrums. As one example look at Ford Motor Company. They are losing their shirts in the US but are doing well overseas. Ford would like to sell more vehicles in the US, but where are the buyers? At least 80% of American jobs are now in the 'service sector.' We are a nation of waitresses, maids, lawn services, fast food flippers, bank clerks, etc. Few people in 'service sector jobs' can afford new vehicles. On shrubs watch we have lost over three million manufacturing jobs. Our manufacturing sector is tiny compared to what it was or compared to that of the rest of the first worlds. General Electric is another good example of what is happening with multinational corporations. GE just announced that for the first time ever over 50% of their gross profits will come from overseas sales. While we are on the road to becoming irrelevent Asia and Europe are actually making things and exporting them. Our service economy is simply swaping dollars among Americans. The lawn guy gets paid, goes to a restaurant and buys dinner and drinks. Nothing is produced, exported and sold in this transaction. If the lawn guy gets paid, goes to swell mart and buys some junk the outcome is even worse for the US economy because most of what he spends goes to China.
I realize that I have painted a simplified picture of economics but the goal is to get all to understand what our situation as a non producing but consuming nation is. Other nations are not going to continue to loan us money at the rate of 2.5 billion dollars per day so that we can continue on this path. We need serious change in our country to return to the competitive, producing nation that we once were. Sending money to China for junk is a losing proposition.
And, besides the horrible worker abuse, China's capitalism is increasingly run by crooked manufacturers that producing shoddy, unsafe and adulterated products, that then get imported into the US thanks to a largely dismantled CPSC and FDA. While little covered by the orporate media, it appears that the melamine contamination in the Chinese made wheat gluten was a deliberate act to produce a false higher protein content. While all the publicity has been over it's use in pet foods, it has also been found in North Carolina hogs some of which have been eaten by now.
Of greater concern, this processed wheat gluten is also used in a lot of vegetarian grodery products like frozen veggie burger products. Shockingly, these processed wheat, corn, and soybean and even rice(!) products are made from grains produced in the US, shipped to China, then shipped back as processed products. Insane!
Good article! Kivals is also right on in pointing out the disasterous effects this kind of "market fundamentalism" has on the natural environment in China. One thing left out of this discussion however seems to be the mention of the rapidly growing "middle class" in China. With the market reforms and more and more investments flooding into the country, and the cultural penchant most Chinese people have for being thrifty and good managers of their savings, more people than I care to count now have the means to live somewhat like the middle class in the G8 nations (i.e. private car, a/c, mcdonalds/kfc, etc.). But on a more positive note, this means more people in the people's republic are given a voice (even if it is just the chance to choose how to spend their money), and this leads to more people expecting basic rights and priviledges for themselves and their fellow citizens.
One other point I would like to raise. I have no love for the CCP in its past or current manifestations. However, aren't we usually (as a cultural West) too quick in assuming the Government of the despotic East is always corrupt to the point where it can't take the interests of its own people into account? Maybe we should try and step into their shoes, by understanding the culture and history, before a wholesale dismissal of the CCP. I am as certain as anyone that China needs more democracy, but the CCP isn't going away anytime soon. So the question becomes how to work w/ rather than merely against the current government. Contrary to one of the previous comments, the last thing China needs now is another "red revolution."
Ho hum, just more China bashing by the ignorant proles.
Considering the wealth and growth of China's structure, how long will it be before they start to own our big corporations-will we then be the workers with longer hours and dehumanizing lives? We have few jobs left here as it is, if your employer were Chinese, how would the work place change-has it started to change already with the overtime law in place now? Could we really see the end of the 40 hr. work week and get a required week of 50-60 hrs. instead?
Try not shopping at Wal Mart then.
Amaiden2 -
If only it were that simple. WalMart is one of many, many companies that use Chinese labor to make our consumer garbage.
I would like to see the workers at the shiiping ports in the US refuse to unload cargo from China. Let's see how long it takes before the corporations start wailing to Congress.