Silicon Sweatshops: A gallery

Sharron Lovell and Jonathan Adams — Special to GlobalPost November 17, 2009 06:48 ET

Special report: Silicon Sweatshops

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Despite strict "codes of conduct," labor rights violations are the norm at factories making the world's favorite high-tech gadgets.

By Jonathan Adams and Kathleen E. McLaughlin
Published: November 17, 2009 06:49 ET

[Editor’s note: Silicon Sweatshops is a five-part investigation of the supply chains that produce many of the world’s most popular technology products, from Apple iPhones, to Nokia cell phones, Dell keyboards and more. The series examines the scope of the problem, including its effects on workers from the Philippines, Taiwan and China. It also looks at a novel factory program that may be a blueprint for solving this perennial industry problem.]

TAIPEI, Taiwan — Hourly wages below a dollar. Firings with no notice. Indifferent bosses. Labor brokers that leech away months of a worker's hard-earned wages. A corporate shell game that leaves no one responsible.

Such conditions are widespread at the contract factories cranking out some of the most popular gadgets on the holiday season’s gift lists, according to labor rights activists and workers interviewed by GlobalPost.

Whether it's your cherished iPhone, Nokia cell phone or Dell keyboard, it was likely made and assembled in Asia by workers who have few rights, and often toil under sweatshop-like conditions, activists say.

By the time a gadget reaches Apple's flagship store on Fifth Avenue in New York City or any other U.S. retailer, it may have passed through the hands of a heavily indebted Filipina migrant worker on the graveyard shift in Taiwan, a Taiwanese "quality control" worker who'll soon be fired without warning, and a young Chinese worker clocking 80-hour weeks on a final assembly line, at less than a dollar an hour.

Recent years have seen a drumbeat of reports on such abuses. In 2006, in an audit following a British media report, Apple found that workers in a factory assembling iPods in China were working excessive overtime hours.

Earlier this year, the Pittsburgh-based National Labor Committee, a nonprofit human rights group, alleged that workers at a supplier to Microsoft, Dell and other brands in Dongguan, China, were clocking mandatory 81-hour weeks, on average. (Dell said in an email that a "corrective action plan" has since been developed after a joint audit of the firm with other customers. A Microsoft spokesperson said it was investigating the supplier firm and would make any "necessary improvements.")

Embarrassed companies have vowed to do better. They've drafted "codes of conduct" for their Asian suppliers, and promised more factory audits to catch abuses.

But here's the problem, say activists: While such codes may be great public relations, they're not working to fix the problem. Worse, the codes permit the big brands to pat themselves on the back, even as workers continue to be exploited in the shadowy world of Asian electronics supply chains.

"These codes of conduct and audits are new tools that every brand will have, and they feel so proud of themselves," said Jenny Chan, a labor rights activist formerly with Hong Kong labor rights group Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM). "But the codes have limits. To see fundamental change, you have to get labor groups involved and gain the trust of workers. Otherwise it's just a cat-and-mouse game between auditors and suppliers."

The problem is compounded by a lack of transparency. Asian electronics supply chains are notoriously murky. Contractors shift orders across borders and between factories and subcontractors, and many major brands treat their supplier list as top-secret information.

That makes it difficult to pin down who's making what for whom and, therefore, difficult to fix blame when allegations of abuse come to light. When a factory catches flak from labor rights groups and negative media coverage, the big customers often cut orders or sever business ties — a surgical strategy that activists say fails to address underlying, systemic problems in the industry.

Apple’s response: “We take corrective actions when required”

Even by the industry's own assessment, its codes are routinely ignored.

In its latest annual report, the Electronic Industry Citizenship Coalition (EICC) published results of joint audits in 2007 and 2008. (EEIC members employ some 3.4 million workers. Members include Apple, Dell and Hewlett-Packard.) It found rampant violations of its code of conduct on working hours and wages and benefits.

Or take Apple's own findings. In its latest "supplier responsibility" update, published in February 2009, Apple found that nearly 60 percent of audited suppliers violated its code of conduct guidelines on work hours and days off.

Other common violations included under-paying for overtime and deducting salary as punishment. And Apple found a few factories that falsified records, employed under-aged laborers and hired workers who had paid recruitment fees exceeding the legal limit.

All of that raises a question: Why aren't the big brands being tougher in enforcing their codes?

Apple insists it is doing a lot. "Our audits are done across all our suppliers," said Apple spokesperson Jill Tan, in a phone interview. "It's a pretty rigorous process, and we take corrective actions as and when required. We audit aggressively, and post all results on our website."

The company's code is a "dynamic document which we continually update," Tan said, and audits are done both by Apple itself, and third-party experts.

Asked how Apple responds to those who say it's hiding behind codes that are ineffective in securing workers' basic rights, Tan said, "It's not just a matter of posturing, we look into this very meticulously. To me, we're pretty open. We don't see how we can provide more information beyond what's already available."

"I'm not sure there are many manufacturers or vendors out there who audit as aggressively as we do," said Tan. "I'm not sure there are many out there who take this as seriously as we do. Have you come across any other companies that provide this much detail in their audits?"

(Apple declined GlobalPost’s request to go beyond the public relations department and interview Bob Bainbridge, the firm's director of social responsibility for suppliers.)

Dell also rejected the idea that industry codes aren't effective. "We take exception to that," said spokesman David Frink. "Given the size and breadth of the global supply chain, full implementation of these important standards is a long-term effort to which Dell is fully committed," the firm said in a later email.

Our investigation

In May, GlobalPost covered reports of labor abuses at just one Taiwan electronics firm believed to supply Apple, Nokia and Motorola at its factories in Taiwan and China. Since then, we’ve interviewed 12 current and former workers at this same company. We heard the following new allegations:

  • For Taiwanese workers, routine violations of Apple and industry codes of conduct on work hours, days off, overtime, worker complaint mechanisms and the right to organize;
  • For Chinese workers, violations of a major electronic industry group's code of conduct on all of the above, and allegations of under-aged labor;
  • For Filipina migrant workers, "placement fees" far in excess of Taiwan regulations, with fees and deductions amounting to nearly a full year's salary — a "core" violation of Apple's code.

These allegations, which are documented throughout this series, are by no means limited to this one supplier. Taiwan's labor broker system applies to many Southeast Asians who come to work on the island. And labor rights groups have done numerous studies of the scope of the problem (see links below).

But the news is not all bleak.

In our reporting, we heard sincere commitments to deal with these issues by frustrated executives who struggle with these complex economic realities. We also learned of a groundbreaking project to improve conditions at a Taiwan supplier for HP that appeared to have excellent results. Though limited in scope, the project offers some degree of hope that the big electronics brands can do more to fix the problem.

This story included reporting from Dongguan, China.

[Next in the series: Shattered dreams. Migrant workers making gadgets at Taiwan's high-tech parks sign deals that make them modern-day indentured servants]

RESOURCES:

Labor rights groups have done numerous studies of the scope of abuses in the high-tech industry across Asia. See, for example:

Silicon Sweatshops: The series

Special Report: Silicon Sweatshops

Shattered dreams

Disposable workforce

The China connection

A promising model

Editor's note: On Thursday Nov. 19, GlobalPost's Passport section will host a conference call with co-author Jonathan Adams to discuss the Silicon Sweatshops series. Normally these calls are only open to Passport members, but this call will be open to the first 100 people to email passport@globalpost.com. It will occur at 10:00 a.m. Eastern time. If you are selected, we will send you instructions on how to participate.

Comments:

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Posted by david wayne osedach on November 17, 2009 11:24 ET

It is interesting to speculate how much our electronic gizmos would cost us if they were manufactured entirely in the US?

Posted by bendross on November 17, 2009 13:11 ET

This article is well-written and chalked full of striking (and accurate) information about the labor situation in Asia. However, I invite the authors to attempt to understand the culture and economic situations of the lands they write about before calling foul.

Additionally, much of this article is predicated on reasoning which is highly ethnocentric in nature. While docking pay, making workers work overtime,and firing without notice (doesn't this happen in the US all the time as well?) may be counter to common practice in most Western countries, labor regulations and practice are not uniform across cultures. And what a Chinese worker expects from his job is not necessary the same as what a similar American would. The fact that often gets lost in the shuffle is that most Chinese factory workers come from rural areas, where they work for longer hours, with no vacation, and with less pay than they get from the factories. They choose factory work out of their own volition, because it is a better scenario than the one which they come from.

In a perfect world, we could magically snap our fingers, pay all workers $7.25 an hour, provide vacation days and fancy benefit packages. To effect these changes take time, effort, and most important the further development and modernization of the respective economy. There are multiple reasons, both internal and external, why the American labor movement took many generations to develop, and is still adapting to the market today. It's never quite so simplistic as it seems at first glance.

In the very first sentence, "dollar per hour" wages are evoked. First of all, have you ever been to China? Are you aware that one dollar in China goes a lot further than one dollar would in the West? In China, you can eat a meal in a restaurant for 50 cents, ride the bus for 15 cents, or see a doctor for about 3 dollars. Any wage comparison must take into account that country's CPI.

Furthermore, in China $1 is actually an exorbitantly HIGH wage for a factory worker. If all factories were paying $1/hr, there would be no factory work in China at all, because the pay increase would offset most of the financial advantages of relocating factories. In reality, 25 cents an hour is a more realistic wage. How can that be? That's even lower than the reports this article is based on. Well, one reason wages are so low in China is that the vast majority of employers provide free room and board to their employees, in effect a built in living wage. (This part always seems to get left out of whistle blowers reports). Even if the pay is low (25 cents an hour isn't much, even in China) workers are always guaranteed of a living space and food to eat.

Ben Ross
benross.net

Posted by Ace on November 18, 2009 01:09 ET

Hahah, that was the very first thing that came to my mind, a Chinese worker making 6 yuan an hour is eating much better than what $7 would get me in America!

Posted by sunder on November 18, 2009 06:27 ET

Ben Ross's take on this is interesting and unquestionable. However, he would agree that such reports are indeed a part of the process that drive the changes for better conditions in the long-term, by exerting pressure on the multinationals and making the employees better informed.

Sunder

Posted by Ace on November 18, 2009 01:22 ET

This is an interesting article, but what's the intention?
It seems Asia only ever comes up in the news as an object of either fear or pity, in this case pity.

I don't think it's really possible to respect another person if you're always finding fault with them, and this applies to nations and cultures as well.

I am not doubting the facts of this article, which are likely true, but I wonder what the intent is behind it.

Posted by Geometeer on November 20, 2009 20:49 ET

In Bangalore (where I live) the outsourcing factories have conditions well above the local-market ones, because global companies are afraid of bad publicity and consumer boycotts. The moment the worker is outside the gate, though, interest stops. She goes home to no running worker, irregular power, clogged sewers...
Real corporate concern would care about these things, but because they cannot be tracked to individual companies, forget it.

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