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文章标题: american commie fighting chinses capitalism (179 reads)      时间: 2002-12-17 周二, 下午9:11

作者:Anonymous罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org

Subject: Toy Story in China





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Toy Story in China

If Barbie Could Talk.

Revolutionary Worker #1166, September 15, 2002, posted at rwor.org



"Every day we work in temperatures that can climb to over 100

degrees. The molding machines are noisy and hot. The air is filled

with a strong chemical smell. I have to repeat the same motions, over

and over, open the machine, put in the plastic, press the machine,

take out the plastic... A lot of us can't stand the heat, the smell

and the noise, and some of us faint."











Worker from the molding department at a toy company in Guangdong,

China whose main clients are Hasbro and Wal-Mart (quoted in "Toys of

Misery: A Report on the Toy Industry of China," National Labor

Committee, January 2002)











"We sleep very little. We don't get back to the dormitory until after

midnight. There are only two bathrooms on the floor and it can take

three hours waiting in line before you can take a shower. Sometimes

there's no water, and you can't take a shower. You can't wash your

face or brush your teeth. We're all exhausted. They give you a half-

day off after working around the clock. It isn't enough. Every once

in a while you can get a day off, but then they don't allow you to

stay in the dormitory. We have to go outside and sleep under the

trees."











Worker from the trimming department in a large toy company in

Guangdong that makes toys for Mattel/Fisher-Price, Hasbro, Tommy and

other companies (quoted in "Toys of Misery: A Report on the Toy

Industry of China")











*****



Toys are big business. In the United States $29.4 billion was spent

on toys in 2000. 3.6 billion toys were purchased in the U.S. that

year--76 million dolls, 349 million plush toys, 125 million action

figures, 279 million hot wheels and matchbox cars, 88 million

sporting good items.



More than half the toys sold in the United States are made in China.

But the people buying these toys know very little--if anything--about

the conditions under which these toys are produced. In recent months

some reports have come out revealing the horrific working conditions

of workers in toy factories in China whose blood, sweat and misery is

being turned into profits for corporations like Mattel, Hasbro,

Disney, McDonald's, WalMart and Toys R Us.



In 1949, the success of the Maoist revolution liberated China from

foreign domination and exploitation. For over 25 years, China was a

socialist country where society was run in the interests of the

masses and people consciously worked to do away with all forms of

exploitation and oppression. But in 1976, after the death of Mao

Tsetung, a new government led by Deng Xiaoping came to power.

Socialism was overthrown and capitalism was restored. The socialist

path of getting rid of inequality and class divisions was reversed .

Now, in capitalist China, the gap between the rich and poor, between

the city and the countryside, between men and women--all the

differences and inequalities in class society--have been and continue

to be deepened and widened. The country is once again under the

domination of foreign powers and China's leaders have opened the door

wide for imperialist investors who dream of high profits to be made

off of sweatshop conditions and cheap labor.



Foreign Domination











In 1979 China passed the Equity Joint Venture Law that opened the

flood gates to foreign capital. Special Economic Zones were created

where foreign corporations were given all sorts of benefits like tax

breaks, access to the best land, infrastructure construction, and

easing of environmental regulations.



From 1979 to the end of 1996, a total of $175 trillion has been

invested in China by foreign entities. The rate of growth of foreign

investment was extremely high during this period--an annual average

increase of 57 percent per year. By 1996, inflows of direct foreign

investments were 275 times 1983's level. By 1996, foreign-funded

enterprises produced nearly half of total Chinese exports, a big leap

from their share of less than 1 percent in 1985.



Following China's entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001,

the pace of foreign penetration and domination of China's economy

will likely become even more rapid. These changes have also affected

China's countryside, forcing hundreds of millions of Chinese peasants

off of the land. (See sidebar).



China's capitalist rulers claim these policies are good for China and

cite the growth of China's economy as proof. However, a look at the

working conditions in China's toy industry reveals that while some,

like huge corporations and capitalists in China, are making a

killing, the vast majority of the people in China do not benefit from

these changes and are literally dying just trying to survive.



Guolaosi: "Worked to Death"











19-year-old Li Chunmei died after working a 16-hour shift at the

Bainan Toy Factory in Soonggang. She was a victim of what many

Chinese call guolaosi . The phrase means "over- work death," and

usually applies to young workers who suddenly collapse and die after

working exceedingly long hours, day after day.



The Washington Post reported that on the night she died, Li Chunmei

had been on her feet for nearly 16 hours--from 8 a.m. until midnight--

running back and forth inside the Bainan Toy Factory, carrying toy

parts from machine to machine.



This was the busy season, before Christmas, when orders peaked from

Japan and the United States for the factory's stuffed animals. Long

hours were mandatory, and at least two months had passed since Li and

the other workers had gotten even one day off.



Less than a week before she died, Li begged her line manager for a

day off, saying she was exhausted. The manager refused. Co-workers

say Li then skipped a night shift to catch up on sleep and was docked

three days' pay.



Lying on her bed that night, staring at the bunk above her, the

slight 19-year-old complained she felt worn out, her roommates

recalled. She was massaging her aching legs, and coughing, and told

them she was hungry. The factory food was so bad, she said, she felt

as if she had not eaten at all.



Her roommates had already fallen asleep when Li started coughing up

blood. They found her in the bathroom a few hours later, curled up on

the floor, moaning softly in the dark, bleeding from her nose and

mouth. Someone called an ambulance, but Li died before it arrived.



According to the Post , "There has been little research on what

causes these deaths, or how often they occur. Local journalists say

many of them are never documented but estimate that dozens die under

such circumstances every year in the Pearl River Delta area alone,

the booming manufacturing region north of Hong Kong."



"Toys of Misery"











"The working hours are long and the pressure is terrible. My team has

to finish 45,000 units every day. During the peak season we usually

work until midnight every day. We have no day off. Now we are working

a night shift, from 6 p.m. to 6 a.m., because of a big new order. The

overnight work avoids the inspection of the client, but it makes us

very tired. We can't help dozing off, and for that we are fined 30 to

40 rmb' ($3.62 to $4.83)."











Worker from the spraying department in a company that produces "Happy

Meal" toys for McDonald's (quoted in "Toys of Misery: A Report on the

Toy Industry of China")











"I've worked for more than a year now. The highest wages I've gotten

was 700 rmb ($84.57) a month. I make an average of 500 to 600 rmb

($60.41 to $72.49) and 300 rmb ($36.25) during slack season. My

husband also works in Shenzhen. My kids are left with my parents at

home. My husband I come from a poor village where nothing grows on

the land. We had to leave. We live separately because we can't afford

to rent a flat."











Worker in a company that produces Cabbage Patch dolls, Star Wars

figures, Barbie dolls and other toys (quoted in "Toys of Misery: A

Report on the Toy Industry of China")











*****



A former labor organizer in China told the Washington Post about

helping a group of 400 migrant workers in Shenzhen file a complaint

about factory conditions, only to be turned away by local

officials. "They said, `Go back to the factory.' They said, `You

should know better. It's like this everywhere,' " he recalled.



"Toys of Misery," a January 2002 report by the U.S.-based National

Labor Committee, examined conditions in eight large-scale toy

companies with 19 factories and more than 50,000 workers located in

the province of Guangdong. These factories produce toys for Hasbro,

Mattel/ Fisher-Price, Tommy, Playskool, Disney, McDonald's, and

Warner Bros.



The report found the following typical conditions, which were present

at almost every toy factory they investigated:



 Mandatory daily shifts of 15 to 16 ?hours, 8:00 a.m. to 11:00 p.m.

or 12:30 a.m.



 Some 20-hour, all-night shifts required, from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00

a.m. During one brutal five-day period at a plant producing stuffed

toys for Mc Donald's, Disney and Warner Brothers, workers were forced

to work virtually around the clock--including one shift of 27

straight hours.



 Seven-day work week, working 30 days a month.



 Workers fainting from the long hours and exhaustion.



 12 to 14 cents-an-hour wages; wages of $8.42 for a 72?hour work

week.



 Workers cheated of 70 percent of the legal minimum wage owned them.

Not a single worker interviewed was receiving the legal minimum wage.



 Handling toxic chemical glues, paints and solvents. Workers do not

even know the names of the chemicals, let alone their health hazards.

Workers are constantly dizzy, nauseous and on the verge of throwing

up from the strong chemical paint odor which hangs thick in the

factory air.



 Factory temperatures of more than 100 degrees, with the pressing

department of one large factory producing for major U.S. toy

companies registering a high of 109 degrees.



 Workers weakened by illness and pregnant workers, who are supposed

to have legal protection, are forced to resign.



 16 workers share one small dorm room.



Over the past few years, hundreds of workers have perished in fires

in China's toy factories and their dormitories. The Zhili Handicrafts

factory was run by a Hong Kong-Chinese joint venture, on contract to

produce the Italian "Chicco" brand of stuffed toys. The factory had

no fire alarms, no sprinklers or fire hoses, and no fire escapes. The

windows were fitted with heavy wire mesh and most exits were locked.

After the fire, the bodies of 50 of the victims were found behind a

locked gate. Raw materials and finished products partly blocked the

staircase and exit that was open. In an effort to avoid adverse

publicity after the fire, local authorities held 50 or so survivors

as virtual prisoners for several days in a local hall, banning them

from contacting friends or relatives.



At one factory, in the year 2000, 100 workers were found to have

contracted Hepatitis B, a serious liver disease. In 2001, another 50

to 60 workers were also found to have the disease. Hepatitis B can be

spread from sharp exposed edges at work and from close household

contact such as an overcrowded dorm with 16 people sharing a small

room.



All the infected workers were immediately fired without a single cent

of compensation. They were told to take a vacation. One worker

explained it like this: "They told you to take a rest--we all know it

means you are fired."



Corporate Codes of Conduct: Hypocrisy and Superprofits











In order to keep working conditions away from public scrutiny,

international corporations that do business in China refuse to

release the names and addresses of the factories that produce their

goods. These factories work as "independent contractors" for large

U.S.-based corporations and other foreign companies.



To cover their ass, U.S. corporations doing business in China have

adopted "corporate codes of conduct" that supposedly guarantee the

rights of workers who make their goods. At a minimum these codes are

supposed to ensure that the contractors that they do business with

comply with local labor laws. However, the whole "contractor" set-up

is just a hypocritical way for the U.S.-based corporations to profit

from the misery of the Chinese workers while denying any

responsibility for their brutal work conditions.



At one factory in China producing toys for Mattel, workers told an

independent investigator that management was alerted to visits by

corporate inspectors at least 10 days in advance. From that point on

the factory would be cleaned and the workers told to lie should any

of the auditors approach them. If they deviated from the "correct"

response to any question, the workers knew they would be fired.

Workers at several factories were required to sign falsified time

cards and wage records. Local authorities caught one company keeping

a double set of books in order to cover up the low wages and inhuman

working conditions.



The big retailers and toy manufacturers know that it is virtually

impossible to produce their goods at the price and in the time they

demand and still adhere to the labor laws of China. They are the ones

calling the shots. And they are the ones making huge profits off the

misery of workers in China.



For example, in one instance, U.S. retailers demand that Chinese

contractors produce 25,000 units of an electronic robot toy in two

weeks. The toy retails for $76.99. The direct labor cost per unit is

54 cents. In another case manufacturers ordered 10,754 units of a toy

watch that retails for $1.99 delivered in two weeks. The direct labor

cost was 3?cents per unit.



Resistance











Workers at China's toy-producing sweatshops face many obstacles to

organizing. Migrant workers are under an apartheid-like passbook

system that limits their mobility and their contact with other

workers. There are no independent trade unions, and news of

resistance is suppressed. Workers who protest are blacklisted and

unable to work and support their families in the countryside who

depend on relatives in the cities for survival.



Despite all this, workers are beginning to find ways to resist their

oppression. In early April hundreds of workers occupied a Chinese toy

factory in southern China and fought with security guards sent to

eject them. Ten workers were injured in the incident at the Shuihe

Electronics factory in Dongguan, in the southern province of

Guangdong.



The incident began after 1,500 workers were fired without being paid

their February and March wages. Most were from poor, inland provinces

and couldn't afford to get home from Dongguan, on the coast near Hong

Kong. The factory produced toys for Wal-Mart and other companies.



*****



The conditions of workers in China's toy factories paint a vivid and

horrifying picture of what capitalism and foreign investment means

for the masses of Chinese people. And growing protest and rebellion

by the proletariat in China illustrate Mao's famous quote that "Where

there is oppression, there is resistance."



Sources used in this article include:



1. "Toys of Misery: A Report on the Toy Industry of China," National

Labor Committee, January 2002 (available at www.nlcnet.org)



2. China Labor Bulletin Website, http://iso.china-labour.org.hk/iso/



3. "How Hasbro, Mattel, McDonald's and Disney manufacture their toys

in China?" Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee (available at

http://www.cic.org.hk/)



4. "McDonald's Toys: Do They Manufacture Fun or More Exploitation?"

Hong Kong Christian Industrial Committee (available at

http://www.cic.org.hk/)



5. "Worked Till They Drop: Few Protections for China's New Laborers"

by Philip P. Pan, Washington Post, May 13, 2002



6. "The Secret Life of Toys" by Sarah Cox, The Georgia Straight ,

November 5-12, 1998.





----------------------------------------------------------------------

----------



This article is posted in English and Spanish on Revolutionary Worker

Online

rwor.org

Write: Box 3486, Merchandise Mart, Chicago, IL 60654

Phone: 773-227-4066 Fax: 773-227-4497

(The RW Online does not currently communicate via email.)





作者:Anonymous罕见奇谈 发贴, 来自 http://www.hjclub.org
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