
Photo: MakeITfair campaign, via flickr
Cross-posted from In These Times.
Our gadgets and tablets make our lives easier, but those palm-sized miracles of convenience are built by hard work in a metastasizing global chain of low-wage labor. Apple has received much criticism lately over the exploitation of workers in China, particularly at the manufacturing behemoth Foxconn, where several worker suicides have stirred public outrage.
But Apple’s power over China’s assemblyline workforce extends to many other suppliers. A new report by China Labor Watch drills down to the lesser-known plants that piece together our hand-held devices. China Labor Watch surveyed ten factors and uncovered abuses in various aspects of production, from grinding work schedules to anemic labor protections. The findings indicate that often in these factories:
- Employers wring every last drop of labor from workers, resulting in “excessive overtime” of roughly 100 to 130 hours per month, and up to 150 to 180 hours per month during “peak production.” On paper, there’s a legal limit in China of 36 overtime hours per month.
- The overall basic wage is so low, compared to the local cost of living, workers have no choice but to work more hours than the legal limit, sometimes 11 hours per day, seven days a week, essentially standing in place all day except for two short meal breaks. Sometimes bosses scrimp by offering relatively small “bonuses” in lieu of the legal overtime rate.
- Workers reported “hazardous working environments,” such as metal dust filling the air at one facilty.
- In some cases, employers failed to provide legally mandated social and work-injury insurance.
None of these issues are unique to Apple’s supply chain, and indeed, these multinational factory jobs are seen as attractive to struggling young workers. CLW has documented poor conditions in many other multinationals operating in China. But holding Apple to account is important for setting standards across the technology sector; not only because it’s an industry leader, but because it portrays itself as an emblem of “corporate social responsibility” and has recentlypartnered with the much-hyped Fair Labor Association to beef up its internal labor monitoring.
One of the key revelations of the CLW report is that it appears that some supplier companies have ample leeway to hide their labor practices by relying heavily on “dispatch” labor, which allows for short-term, minimally regulated work arrangements. According to the report, dispatched labor in China allows companies to prevent labor organizing, avoid having to provide severance pay to short-term workers, avoid overtime regulations and liability for worker injuries, and skirt requirements for paying social insurance for dispatched workers.
The ducking of labor regulations and standards mirrors the abuse of the “contractor” label in U.S. workplaces—a tried-and-true tactic to minimize employers’ responsibilities. In China, however, workers are even more vulnerable to kind of exploitation, stuck with an opaque legal system, scrambling to avoid poverty and lacking the backing of independent unions.
Apple’s production chain is replete with this kind of labor, according to CLW, which suggests that Apple may be indirectly sweeping unsavory labor practices under the rug by ignoring many of these workers in their monitoring process. “Except for Foxconn in Shenzhen which transferred all dispatched workers to direct-hire status in 2011,” the report states, “all other investigated factories overused dispatched labor, including Jabil in Shenzhen where dispatched labor made up almost 70% of the workforce.”
CLW argues that while Apple has seemingly invested major resources to enhance its auditing system, indirectly-hired employees remain a troubling blindspot:
Labor dispatching demands special attention because Apple does not address it in its Supplier Responsibility Progress Reports… If Apple were to take the problem into account, the number of supplier factories that meet Apple’s standards would fall considerably.
Apple may for now find it more profitable to maintain a policy of willful blindness when monitoring working conditions. But it may be pushed by political shifts in China. Strikes, protests and sometimes violent clashes have been breaking out routinely across the country. In recent months, labor actions have erupted at the facilities tied to global companies like Citizen Watch, Sanyo and Panasonic.
At the same time, the Chinese government is trying to contain a rising tide of pro-democracy protest in Hong Kong. Though Hong Kong has enjoyed political autonomy from Beijing since returning to Chinese rule 15 years ago, its recent social unrest and rising economic inequality portend escalating tension between neoliberalism and social equity.
CLW’s executive director Li Qiang told In These Times that since China’s cheap labor costs encourage Hong Kong companies to shift capital to the mainland, “Hong Kong businessmen and companies gain extravagant benefit from this investment, and the unemployment rate in Hong Kong may be higher. Therefore, the widening disparity between the haves and the have-nots in Hong Kong may become a concern.”
From Shenzhen to Hong Kong to Cupertino, vast political and social distance separates the disparate elements of this industrial regime—workers in the U.S. and relatively well-off regions in Asia seeing employers ship off to China, Chinese workers toiling at the base of the supply chain, and the consumers who absorb the products on the other end. But as everyone gradually realizes that they’re all subjects of a corporate empire, the slickness of the tech industry will begin a slow-motion crash into the hard realities of the global factory floor.



44 Comments

And in other news, Apple fanboys and girls couldn’t care less. After all, Steve Jobs “changed the world” with his super-cool gadgets.
The devotion to this foul company and its now thankfully deceased High Priest can only be described as cult-like.
I don’t think Apple really cares about all this, they only want cheap phones to sell for big bucks to stupid people…
We are now in the final preparation stage for things to come. China today, Chicago tomorrow; one step at a time. The phase we’re in now, began quite some time ago.
There was a time when every able bodied man who wanted to work had a job. This was when what I call “The serf class”, meaning people who could read and write, but had no special skills, had a high standard of living. At that time we had on the job training, this meant that if you passed the physical, you got hired.
The “Serf class” had the highest standard of living in the history of the world. The class of people who had been misused and abused since time began, thanks to the Unions, could earn a decent wage. Young people will find this hard to believe. The fact that any young healthy person, with no college, or specific skills could get a job making the equivalent of $40. per hour with medical benefits for him and his family; was the way of life.
In 1966, Detroit was like the “Emerald city of Oz”; everybody dressed “swelegant” and had a new car. I have never seen so many new cars in one place, before nor since my visit to Detroit at that time. This high standard of living we enjoyed continued for many years, it became as natural as breathing. The “serf class” took this high standard of living for granted. Their failure to realize that the unions were responsible for the high wages and benefits has sent the “serf class” back to the poverty from which it originated. The unions deduced that our wages should be some percentage of the profits corporations were making; which meant that as their profits increased, so did our wages.
How we got from full employment and high wages to where we are now, is not at all complicated. The Democratic Party has historically represented working people and the unions. The Republican Party represented “big business” and the aristocracy. After the civil rights act of 1964, the Republican Party developed what it called “The Southern Strategy”. Southerners hated anything to do with equal rights for blacks and still do. This “Southern Strategy” always includes some kind of racist language in their platform which indicates they are against blacks in some form or fashion. They have perfected a kind of racist code talk that “White Racists” understand best and other Whites understand least.
Ronald Reagan was the beginning of the end for the “Serf class”, and at the same time, he was the “Good old boy’s” favorite candidate; but the good old boy’s never cared much for unions “No how”, even when they themselves were in a union. The “Good old boys” never were much good at logic, consequently you will have to ask one of them “How that made any sense”.
After being officially chosen as the Republican candidate, Ronnie gave his acceptance speech in “Philadelphia, Mississippi”; where James Chaney, a 21-year-old black man from Meridian, Mississippi, Andrew Goodman, a 20-year-old White jewish anthropology student from New York, and Michael Schwerner, a 24-year-old White jewish CORE organizer and former social worker also from New York were murdered.
In his speech, he said that Jefferson Davis was one of his heroes. Jefferson Davis was the president of “The Confederacy” during the civil war. Reagan went on to say that he was for states rights, which meant “Yall can do anything you want to with black folks while I look the other way”. Although Reagan opposed any and everything to do with Civil Rights for blacks, he said he was not a Racist.
His war on labor was a war on the “Serf Class”. If you are unemployed, or working for minimum wage; you can probably thank Ronald Reagan. However, the most unique aspect of where we are now; is that Union members voted for Ronald Reagan in 1980 and 1984. This is equivalent to a rabbit voting for year round rabbit hunting.
Reagans war on the Unions began when he fired 13,000 Air traffic controllers and destroyed their Unions. He also banned them from federal service for life. During his two terms in office, millions of Americans were thrown out of work, while the richest had their taxes cut in half. As productivity increased from 1980 to the present, working peoples wages remained essentially frozen. Major corporations laid off tens of thousands of workers while making enormous profits.
By Republican standards, Ronald Reagan is considered the best President ever. His success was the destruction of the unions that had fought so long and hard for the high wages and benefits that gave American workers the highest standard of living in the world, and the highest standard of living ever in the history of the world for “The Serf Class”.
We went into the final stage of preparation for things to come after 06. That’s when they increased the interest rate, although a blind man could see that with the “subprime” crisis slowing real estate down; the interest rate needed to be lowered. This was the same as pushing a crippled man off a cliff.
This affected you, even though your house was paid for; the value went down. Next, they manipulated the price of the commodities you must buy in order to live, such as food and gasoline, they went “sky high”; this took so much money out of middle class neighborhoods, that no one could buy already cheaply priced houses, plus it increased unemployment.
Now we are in last phase of things to come; your house is not worth as much as it used to be, you are unemployed, and nobody is hiring. You take it from there.
And all because Apple didn’t want to share their platform, and elitist Baby Boomers thought that was a good thing!
Consistently fabulous progressive writing from Michelle Chen, my new hero. Thanks!
What irks the crap out of me besides all the foregoing, is people’s Messianic devotion to all things Apple and St. Stevie. Like he and the company can do no wrong. Strikes me as a borderline cult.
For those who criticize Apple, most tech companies, including Microsoft & others in the software realm, Panosonic & others in the hardware realm have been using India and China because the work is cheap, but also the cost of living is very cheap.
A room in India with food in 1979 was available for $1.50 per day. You could not pay that price anywhere in America; therefore, that is a hard equivalency to make. When I was a student in Venice, I boarded with a family for $ 15 dollars a day. Once at our 2 hour lunch between classes the person asked how much would a place (room) cost in the US? After telling her it would be $150 a month – no food included – she freaked out! Basically, what I am saying is the equivancy is not the same and has to be factored in.
What is much more appalling is that Apple’s headquarters on paper is located in Nevada. Because that State has NO taxes, they pay NO taxes. That is the biggest rub to this economy, for they use our roads, sewer, and other utilities and we (the average taxpayer) are paying that, not them.
Thanks Michelle. Tweeted. Recommended.
Prove it.
One more layer to add to my last imput. My friend after college went to Alaska on and island to can Tuna. They were boarded up in (let us say a slightly better quarters then in China). With food and board their daily fee was cheap and they provided drugs to help them stay up nights working, similar to the Chinese workers working overtime, maybe worse.
He worked there for 6 months then left like so many others. He lived in Tucson for the other six (6) months doing nothing on the money he earned.
So we too in the US have similar working conditions in our own country! I am not sure, but I think there is not much taxes being paid in Alaska. So, enjoy your TUNA with a salad.
Apple’s headquarters is in Cupertino, CA. They have an office and a handful of employees in Reno. And yes, probably for tax avoidance. Probably the same reason a lot of companies are headquartered in Delaware.
I’m not saying it’s right, but singling out Apple is misguided.
CenterPoint even has a business focused on this.
Nevada and Delaware Corporate Headquarters
“Our gadgets and tablets make our lives easier . . .” Do they? Are you sure? I know that my gadgets make spending money easier. Otherwise they make my life harder.
At least Apple doesn’t donate to ALEC or back the school-privatization scam movement, both of which Microsoft and Bill Gates do.
That being said, now I know why Apple’s so ‘profitable’ — it charges the same prices it did back when it was making everything in America, unlike other companies that have cut their retail prices, even though they all use the same factories in China.
Here you go:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/29/business/apples-tax-strategy-aims-at-low-tax-states-and-nations.html?pagewanted=all
I know it is all the rage these days to hate on Apple and their manufacturing and supply chain, but Apple is not the only company that has their gadgets made in China by a select group of companies.
Until you start focusing on ALL the companies, such as HTC, Samsung, HP, Dell, etc, that use Chinese labor to make their gadgets I simply can’t take you seriously.
Excellent analysis lakota. As a young man growing up in the detroit area during those times, I can attest to the accuracy of your statements. One thing I would like to mention about labor and Saint Ronnie during the controllers strike. When Ronnie shit-canned the controllers,labor made probably the biggest mistake they ever made in the last sixty years.Instead of the pilots ,stews,mechanics,etc refusing to cross the picket lines,they fucked up and kept working. Imagine if they would have all just have said,”fuck you,I’m not working till you settle with our brothers the controllers” I truly believe things would be different today.
But Apple, unlike the other companies, claims to be so much nicer and better. That’s why they’re being singled out. You make an example of one and scare the others into better behavior. If you don’t do that, none of them will have any incentive to change.
We can’t boycott all tech companies at once, but we can let the world’s richest one know that we are prepared to take our dollars elsewhere rather than make them even richer. If they clean up their act, good.
That’s very true, and it’s the proper counterpoint to conservatives saying that America’s poor “have it too good” compared to some Peruvian peasant making “only $500″ a year–said peasant might *own his own farm and be able to grow his own food* which means he’s buffered against both starvation and homelessness, and enjoys a degree of protection that America’s poor do not have. For him, money is just something good to have the times he needs to purchase something, whereas America’s poor need a constant stream of money in just to *live*.
In some ways, other tech companies do this too. However, Apple deserves being singled out for this because:
1) those other tech companies aren’t making 70 % profit off their items. For low-end laptops and desktops, the margins are much tighter;
2) those other tech companies couldn’t make the same items in the US for a whopping **50 % profit**;
3) with the latter, there’s also an environmental issue; i.e., the insanity of ignoring widely available and underutilized labor in the US and Europe, the markets where most of these devices will be sold, while exploiting labor in China *and then using increasingly scarce oil* to ship them to their markets. If oil was not de facto subsidized by the US military, if Apple and other companies had to bear its true costs, this should not be economical.
So no, no, no and again no.
-stewartm
If we are discussing (or cussing) Apple and Job, then a mention of part of the “reason” for Apple’s “$uce$$, msmolly, seems, to me, entirely appropriate …
You are quite correct, however, in pointing out that Apple is not alone in the use of this particular “tactic” or “method” of “improving” financial “return”.
Thank you, Michelle.
Recommended, as always your posts deserve to be, to the thoughtful consideration of everyone at FDL.
DW
The airlines took heavy advantage of the perceived status differences between the pilots (the top of the heap of the non-managerial staff) and flight attendants and grounds crews. Pilots didn’t support the other workers when they went on strike, and so when it was the pilots’ turn to get hosed nobody had their back for them.
That’s the thing that doesn’t get discussed: Apple’s products could all be made in the US and the company would still turn enormous profits.
Shades of Rev. Niemuller, hmm?? I’ve read stories of the underpaid, overworked pilots, and remember a time when their uniforms and arrogance defined them as top-of-the-food-chain. Their unwillingness to stand up for their brethren echoes today. Whether you discuss broken healthcare, broken finance, broken government . . . no one is willing to be the first to take a haircut; so we just keep kicking the can down the road.
I am taking it from there. Good analysis. Fortunately for me my neighborhood is experiencing an upgrade as wealthier retirees buy up the older homes and tear them down and build McMansions in their place. So my home and property is holding its own. Jobs around here though are not happening, especially for us older people. The wealthy retirees are only here for 3 mos. ( I live on the coast.) Then they go to Fla. to the condo for winter. Lucky them. For the rest of us NOT so lucky we get to sweat it out till???
That could be true of everything we buy with Chinese produced electronics or containing components from there.
Apple is the best to spotlight as it owns and runs a company plant there. But I’d bet my Hewlett Packard laptop is culpable, too, if not as visibly. It’s loaded with chips from there made by Chinese contractors. The worker making those is probably as badly off (if not even worse) than the Apple worker.
Maybe there needs to be a wider net cast to include US companies buying from Chinese contractors which exploit their own workforce. This would not replace Apple’s issue but be in addition.
I see a dark cloud in your silver lining.
In LA people lived in what they called “beach shacks” at that time. They were modest homes with an ocean view. The prices on those so called shacks went “sky high”. The problem the people who didn’t want to sell was the “sky high” taxes. Eventually no one could afford to live there but rich people.
Your problem is quite rare, and most people would like to have it.
Perhaps, with moving coastlines, lakota, many of us will end up getting what we “wish” for?
DW
While this was about “Apple”, I see it as a much larger problem which will have to be solved on a much larger stage, as it relates to this “corporatocracy”.
After reading so many insightful posts, I have come to the conclusion that we must view this as “we” are the problem, not “Apple”; because that’s the only constructive way to view things and find a way to take action which will lead to a solution.
What is always most needed in times like this is “leadership”. While the young people in the “occupy movement” have the vim, vigor, and vitality; they need someone to help them focus. After choosing Barack Obama, I know how everyone feels in regard to leaders; but I just had a strange “epiphany” in regard to a leader, and believe it or not, this involved Barack Obama.
I was flipping channels and stopped on CNN, Barack Obama was shaking hands after signing the student loan rate extension. When he shook this persons hand, the strangest look came over his face for an instant; it was so many things all rolled into one, that I find it quite difficult to describe, it was a combination of awe, and fear; it was if this person could see right through him and knew what a phony he was. Although I could only see the back of this persons big black head, I knew instantly that it was “John Lewis”. That look on Barack Obama’s face told me it was John Lewis.
Congressman Lewis is one of the most gentle people you could ever want to meet, how could looking into his face cause such a reaction? The complete answer to that question would fill a book. John Lewis is the very last of the living legends who fought for civil rights and was with Dr. King, in Alabama. He was with Bobby Kennedy when he was assassinated. John Lewis is everything we wanted Barack Obama to be, and when Barack Obama looked into John Lewis’s eyes; that’s what he saw, “the real McCoy”, and Barack Obama realized that he was no more than an impersonator.
If you get a counterfeit bill, do you say that printed money is bad? I know that’s what we feel like after getting Barack Obama, but you can’t get any where without a leader. I believe John Lewis and the occupy movement would make a good match. They would have someone who sincerely believes in them, and someone who they could “trust”, and I realize that right now “trust” is the nastiest word in the english language; but we can not get anywhere until we find a leader we can trust.
Don’t worry, as China, Russia, and America divide over Iran on Israel’s order, Apple will not even be available in America unless we start building them here. Better dust of the abacus if things don’t cool down.
To tie this in to your comment @3, Obama has stated on more than one occasion that his favorite President is Reagan, because he brought stability back to the USA, after all the turbulence of the 60″s and 70′s. The years that were characterized by the peace movement, the expansion of civil rights, and the Great Society, which Obama found so objectionable.
Good points about Apple being just one of many companies that are worthy of being targeted and exposed, but being an industry leader, particularly one that purports to be setting progressive standards, many labor and rights advocates see Apple as at least a good place to start. As we mentioned in the article, both China Labor Watch and other groups focused on labor conditions in China have called out various other tech companies, as well as many other companies like Disney, Wal-Mart, etc. And there are, by the way, many other lower-tier multinationals, linked to brands we’ve never heard of, that also engage in these practices. Thanks for reading.
I believe this was “after” he got elected. We have two Obama’s; the before and after. The best Bama is “Nobama”.
” … but you can’t get anywhere without a leader.”
Well, considering the level of “leadership”, one may reasonably ask, “Where are we now …?
Perhaps, lakota, before we get all misty-eyed about “leaders”, it were wise to consider several things: The abilities to actually think and reason and the courage to insist that those abilities be evident in those who would presume to be “leaders”, those whose “ambitions” are, most often, summed up as self-serving “pragmatic efficiencies” … that has NOTHING to do with the real and genuine needs of actual human beings.
Ah, well …
DW
As we’ve glanced on before, Obummer and his neocon compatriots cynically exploit the reaction to the New/cultural left. They use it’s drug culture and revolutionary resistance to mask their favoring of capitalism and empire. Obummer’s not for a disciplined left, though he might leave that impression.
Tech companies grow to be like small militaries. Even their customers are occupied territory.
“those whose “ambitions” are, most often, summed up as self-serving “pragmatic efficiencies”” are in cynical sympathy with the squeezed and miseducated comprador.
Those were the primary targets of the Amurican Dream. They still lust for their opiates.
I actually don’t think that’s true. We don’t have the production capacity, we also don’t produce any of the raw materials or make any of the parts anymore. Why do you believe we could make iPhones here?
Michelle, how many of the other major computing companies self-audit and make public the results? How many other computing companies tout their environmental and social practices? (I know HP and Sony do…)
It’s fair to criticize Apple, but it demands criticizing the industry as a whole. Profit margins aside, Apple and other companies that produce millions of hi tech electronic products a day will no longer find a home in the USA. Our environmental regulations wouldn’t allow it and we no longer have the facilities that could support that kind of demand.
So, what’s the solution?
Agreed on the need for a broader critique of the industry as a whole. But if you follow the coverage that ITT has been doing of the tech industry, together with the numerous reports from organizations like Make IT Fair, CLW, China Labour Bulletin, etc. you’d be hard pressed to find anyone who believes that Apple is the only foul agent here. This article, which focused on specifically on a new report that CLW put out–an investigation into Apple’s supply chain–actually builds on the earlier reports targeting Apple and does elucidate the other aspects of the supply chain that these audits may often miss. So as we mentioned in this article and other related coverage, this is part of a longer process of targeting the systemic issues in the industry. This cannot be accomplished within one article, which is why we continue to cover it on a regular basis, and why this deserves sustained media and political attention.
It seems to me that you have described Barack Obama.
In two short years John F. Kennedy changed this country in more ways than you can believe. He believed in human beings, not corporations or money. He also had a strong sense of right and wrong, maybe that’s what’s lacking in most “politicians”. Leaders and politicians are not the same thing, and I see “politicians” almost exclusively.
I’m visualizing someone with wisdom, and wisdom can only come with age; someone who wants an even greater epitaph than the one he’s already going to get; someone who values humanity more than his own life; someone whose life is an open book; meaning that you can go to page 32 of his bio and find that out; those are some of the qualities we need in a person who has a desire to lead us out of this fog.
When I say “us” I don’t mean as “D”S or “R”s; I’m referring to the people here at FDL as a group, and the largest other “group” is the “occupy movement”.
While we do what we can within the “D” grouping, it’s a lost cause and rationalizing is not going to make it any better. We have to start as a group and go from there; otherwise we go in a circle and come back to where we are now. That’s called a “caucus race”.
Oh, wholeheartedly agree. Other vendors (Dell, HP, Toshiba, Acer, etc.) buy the same parts/chips.
But I very much doubt your HP laptop or any marketed by any of the above OEMs is being sold at a 70 % profit. I very much doubt that if it were made in the US, it would sell wtih a 50 % profit. Such is exactly the case with IPhones. Apple currently characterizes the very notion of short-sighted and parasitic capitalism–their Asian workers aren’t paid well enough to buy the very IPhones and IPads they make, so Apple depends on someone else paying the wages necessary to buy their toys. Increasingly, that “someone else” gets fewer by the year.
And hey, if people are going to fork over mega-dough for a electronic toy, shouldn’t they expect that said dough go to at least some social good instead of the same-old same-old??
-stewartm
No saviors from on high, thanks. Kennedy was a philandering schmuck whose mafioso father bought him the presidency. He invaded Cuba, got us rolling in Vietnam–what else? Oh yeah, he started the Peace Corps. He DID inaugurate the Presidency as permanent, vaseline-smeared PR lovefest, but I’d love to know why you think he changed anything.
Agree with you PW.
Would you prefer Obama to Kennedy? Would you prefer those times to these times? The American Dream was a reality during those times, people had jobs.