Fair Labor Solutions

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Wednesday, November 23, 2011

Labor unrest in Shenzhen

With the labor and raw material costs all increasing, and the factories ability to raise the prices blocked by brands desperate to keep retail price points unchanged, it is often the workers who suffer. No one wants to raise the retail prices in a down economy. However, it is unreasonable to expect the factories to absorb these higher costs without something snapping. With workers taking matters into their own hands, we can expect to see more of this type of action in the future.
This from China labor Watch
New York, November 22nd, 2011 -- On November 21st, more than 400 workers went on strike at the Shenzhen Top Form Underwear Co., Limited factory in Shenzhen, Guangdong Province. The motivation behind the strike was rooted in worker unrest over the factory’s unfair piece-rate wage system and workers’ unachievable daily production quotas. Despite the long work hours and high pressure that workers toil under to complete their work quotas, the factory does not pay its workers overtime wages. During the peak season when the factory receives many orders, employees work approximately 300 hours per month. Regardless of these excessive work hours, workers are still only able to earn around 2,000 RMB per month ($314 USD). Workers are regularly reprimanded and verbally abused by factory management, further amplifying the pressure felt by the factory workers.Li Qiang, Executive Director of China Labor Watch, has said in a statement that factory workers have become increasingly conscious of their rights as workers and ways to protect these rights. Despite this belief, many factories still employ old-fashioned coercive-style management structures instead of a more fair and human-oriented system. Li believes that there is a growing sense of social justice among factory workers; this will lead to many more strikes in Chinese factories in the future.

 

1 comment:

  1. No one wants to admit that high taxes and government interference with business is creating this high stress, low wage problem for unskilled workers. Allowing the free market to fluctuate would be painful at first but in the end it would mean more opportunities for workers.

    ReplyDelete

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