Microsoft Exposed in using Chinese Sweatshop Labour
A recent report from The National Labor Committee (NLC) claims that workers at the KYE Factory in Dongguan, China are living “like prisoners”. The factory- which makes products for several companies- produces Microsoft Xbox 360 controllers, cameras and mice. Microsoft makes up the biggest portion of the factory’s output- about 30 percent.
“We are like prisoners,” one worker said in the report. “It seems like we live only to work. We do not work to live. We do not live a life, only work.”
The report accuses the KYE factory of committing several legal breaches over the last few years, including below minimum wage pay, hiring underage workers and sexual harassment of the female staff. The Chinese government did investigate once in 2008, but the supposedly unannounced inspection was leaked to factory Executives days before the inspection. The underage staff were put on busses and taken to a field, where they remained until the all clear was given. Despite photographic evidence of the underage exodus, no further investigations were initiated.
Conditions in the factory are described as “crude” and “exhaustive”. Work weeks run between 90-100 hours, and much of the labor is children on “work study programs”, many of whom are between 16-17; some are no more than 14. Temperatures generally range around 90 degrees in the shop, and mandatory shifts of 15 hours per day add up to 40.5 hours of overtime per week- 388 percent higher than China’s legal limit. Workers have three days off a month, and if an employee misses a day for any reason including illness or injury, they face fines that equal one week’s worth of pay. Unions, strikes or any deliberate work stoppage is a crime under Chinese law.
Women make up the majority of the staff, because according to the report, the female staff are easier to manipulate and intimidate. Sexual harassment is a way of life for the female workforce, and men are generally hired as children, with only a few lasting more than a year or two.
“Workers face humiliation, punishment, sexual harassment, as every moment of their lives are controlled,” the report states. “In 2007 and 2008, before the recession hit China, there were often 2,000 young people at KYE, 16 to 18 years of age, most of whom were women.”
Employees assemble up to 2000 Microsoft mice per shift, causing numerous minor injuries, but once the set number is deemed as sustainable, the quota is raised. If the workers do not make the goal, they are subject to fines and penalties. Lacerations and bruises are commonplace. Work stoppage injuries generally result in heavy fines from the management for both the workers responsible, as well as the floor managers and foremen.
While operating a hole punch in the making of an internet camera, one worker had has index finger cut off. Management took him to the hospital, but when it was discovered that the man had disobeyed an operating regulation, factory bosses fined the man $29.26- roughly 5 ½ days worth of pay- and fired immediately.
Like many international manufacturers, Microsoft outsources to companies like KYE. The manufacturer occasionally gives the factory its set of guidelines to obey in terms of human rights, which are almost always ignored. The report further claims that Microsoft executives have been through the factory multiple times, always accompanied by mid and high-level KYE managers. U.S. company representatives rarely- if ever- speak to the workers.
“The young workers never think or talk about the foreign companies and put all the blame on the factory. No one has told them how wealthy and powerful Microsoft and the other companies really are,” the report claims. “Since the young Chinese workers would never dream of making demands against Microsoft or the other corporations, this permits the corporations to tout their codes of conduct while knowing full well that they will never be implemented. It’s all just part of the game.”
Microsoft has responded to the report, claiming that it is “very concerned”, and it intends to investigate the factory.
Corporate Vice President of manufacturing and operations for entertainment and devices, Brian Tobey responded on the official Microsoft blog: “As a company that sells a wide range of hardware and devices, we take very seriously our corporate responsibility to ensure that the manufacturing facilities and supply chain operations that we use comply with all relevant labor and safety requirements and ensure fair treatment of workers.”
The bad press alone should be enough to garner at least a cursory investigation from Microsoft, but the actions of the American Chamber of Commerce in China – of which Microsoft is an influential member, speak differently.
In 2007 the Chinese government proposed several labor rights reforms. The law would have included: the right for all workers to have a signed contract; probationary periods to last no longer than six months, and temporary workers would be given permanent status after one year; severance for workers whose contracts were not renewed; 30-day notice before any layoffs; and the right to discuss safety and health issues with management. The law would not radically change the fabric of the workers in China, but it would be a step in the right direction and a sign to the workers that progress was possible.
The law was voted down, in large part due to pressure from the American Chamber of Commerce in China, who released this statement, “We believe it might have negative effects on China’s investment environment” [and may] “reduce employment opportunities for PRC [People's Republic of China] workers.”
“Despite these earlier findings, we take the allegations raised this week quite seriously. Another comprehensive on-site audit of the facility will be conducted next week, with a specific goal of investigating the allegations raised in the NLC report. In addition, we will have monitors on site pending the results of the inspection,” Tobey said. “We will take all appropriate steps to ensure the fair treatment of the KYE workers.
The report focuses on the KYE factory that opened in 2002. The workforce is estimated to be around 3,000 and growing. KYE manufactures computer mice, keyboards, internet cameras, video game controls and Wacom tablets.
Original article by Ryan Fleming, posted on www.digitaltrends.com - For Full report by American based National Labour Committee visit http://www.nlcnet.org/reports?id=0034




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Wow what an investigative report of lies and fabrication
When manufacturers in China face a shortage of workers. When all family has a one child policy(only western families ignore their children until they go wild with drugs and delinquency). When income are improving. When there is universal health coverage (at low cost). When farm community has retirement benefits. When the fact that Chinese look much younger than westerners are overlooked. When these US 'super human' investigators may have very little if not zero knowledge of anything Chinese
This report is typical of western and UK lies and fabrications. China had seen such attacks in the past especially in UK media in the late 19the century up to 2009 Beijing Olympic. Do you people ever get tire? Or is it rather white supremacy at work? Or rather hatred to ease the daily pain of western society? Or is it me, because you people believe Chinese is lower human than westerners?
Why can't you people learn that lies does not work? Do you people believe in your god? Is USA all perfect and godly? The war of Iraq is all legal based on 'truth' as per CIA report? Water boarding in not torture? US and UK solders never kill any women and children in Iraq and Afghanistan? The post war Iraqis live in peace and freedom thanks to US/UK invasion?
Strange objections...
Hmmm, your objection to the report appears to lack any substance.
Suggestions that Chinese working conditions are good because "manufacturers in China face a shortage of workers. When all family has a one child policy(only western families ignore their children until they go wild with drugs and delinquency). When income are improving. When there is universal health coverage (at low cost). When farm community has retirement benefits. When the fact that Chinese look much younger than westerners are overlooked. When these US 'super human' investigators may have very little if not zero knowledge of anything Chinese" is not evidence to argue against the article.
The point of the article is not to belittle the Chinese workers but to show exploitation of Chinese workers by a giant of capitalism, namely Microsoft, who should be able to and are able to provide much better conditions to the works that produce their good.
Allegations that this article is "white supremacy at work" are totally undounded and unjusified and such an srticle would not be tolerated, as stated in the organisations policy a at the bottom of the site.
I would suggest you read the initial report produced by the National Labor Committe and come back with some arguments based on facts, and give reasons why workers should face exploitation other than the notions that "manufacturers in China face a shortage of workers. When all family has a one child policy".
Fazed by Foxconn?
There's an article in the FT today by David Pilling which points out:
"Some 200m migrants have left the countryside in search of a better life. They cannot all be deluded. In the specific case of Foxconn, it is true that the recent spate of suicides marks a sharp rise from last year. But given the plant employs 300,000 – and assuming reported numbers are accurate – suicide rates are significantly lower than outside the factory. China has a particularly high suicide rate for women.
"More generally, average wages have been outstripping inflation for years and working conditions have been improving. In 2008, southern Guangdong province, of which Shenzhen is a special zone, began a campaign to weed out shoddier plants, forcing the closure of half its toy factories. (Many moved inland to poorer provinces.) In March, Guangdong became the latest to raise the minimum wage, by 20 per cent. In theory, though probably not in practice, that could alleviate the pressure to work endless overtime.
"Labour activists would argue, with some justification, that these are incremental improvements from a Dickensian base. But one side of the migrant experience that emerges very strongly from Ms Chang’s book [Leslie Chang - Factory Girls] is a sense of prevailing optimism in the possibility of upward mobility. Recent waves of migrants have grander ambitions than those who came before them. Many flit from job to job, continually searching for something better, or putting their savings into property and start-up ventures (or pyramid schemes)."
PS: Time to weed out some of the spurious postings on this site!
Further Foxconn
The Economist says:
"The toll (a dozen this year) is lower than the suicide rate among the general population in China. But the deaths have raised questions about working conditions in electronics manufacturing in general and in particular at Foxconn, which keeps its customers secret, rarely opens its plants to outsiders and routinely ignores press inquiries.
"Conditions at the firm are actually not that bad compared with many others, says Boy Lüthje of the Institute of Social Research in Frankfurt. It pays new hires in Shenzhen the minimum wage of 900 yuan ($130) a month. Food and lodging are free, as are extensive recreational facilities. But workers routinely put in overtime in excess of the 36 hours a month permitted under Chinese law, says Mr Lüthje. Annual turnover is 30-40%, but a constant stream of young migrant workers replaces those who move on.
"In response to the suicides, the company is said to have surrounded buildings with nets, hired counsellors, brought in Buddhist monks to pray and toyed with asking employees to sign a “no suicide” pledge. On an impromptu visit to Shenzhen, Hon Hai’s chief executive, Terry Guo, insisted that he was not running a “sweatshop”.
"The Chinese press used to laud Foxconn for creating jobs, but the firm has become an object of criticism and undercover investigations."
China (wages) rising
I see that David Pilling in the FT is arguing that things are getting better for Chinese workers for two reasons, one related to market forces, and the other to government action (although the government doesn't really seem to be doing much apart from expressing its hopes and passing a labour contract law).
See: www.ft.com/cms/s/0/a1726846-6e70-11df-ad16-00144feabdc0.html
As it may be gated, here's an extract:
First, government authorities, through the media, are simply acknowledging reality. The years of an endless supply of cheap labour, on which the first three decades of China’s economic lift-off was built, are coming to an end. That is partly demographic. Because of China’s one-child policy, the supply of workers under 40 has dwindled by as much as a fifth. Fewer workers mean more bargaining power. Honda staff are demanding no less than a 50 per cent rise. Foxconn, a China-based Taiwanese contract manufacturer plagued by a recent spate of worker suicides, has just granted a 30 per cent wage increase.
Unlike the first wave of migrants who came to the cities in the 1980s and 1990s, the current batch has more options and higher aspirations. Many are not content to save money for a few years before returning home. They want to settle in the booming cities. That means they need higher wages. If they can’t get them, there are opportunities at home. Under cost pressure, some factories have shifted inland, away from the factory towns on the east coast and the Pearl River Delta, and closer to the provinces from which most migrants come.
The second reason for the cautious sanction of industrial action is that the Communist party has a stake in better working conditions. Providing cheap Chinese labour to multinationals from Japan, the US and Europe was a means, not an end. Deng Xiaoping said it was glorious to get rich, not to make foreign-invested capital rich. As elsewhere, the share of labour in corporate profits has been falling. That runs contrary to the emphasis placed by China’s leadership on a “harmonious society”. Chinese media coverage of the Honda strike, as well as of the Foxconn suicides, has been heavy with analysis of the widening income gap.
There are other signs that the scales may be tipping labour’s way. In 2008, Beijing enacted the labour contract law, stipulating that workers be given written contracts. Coupled with growing wage pressure, this changed atmosphere has obvious implications for foreign investors grown accustomed to a low-wage, strike-free, hire-and-fire environment.
Fantastic Foxconn?
Putting up their wages for a second time, according to the BBC:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia_pacific/10252344.stm