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Labor Rights in China

Tim Costello, Brendan Smith, and Jeremy Brecher | December 21, 2006

Editor: John Feffer, IRC

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Foreign Policy In Focus

A major debate is underway in China on a proposed law that would grant new rights to Chinese workers. The debate has not been widely reported outside of China; until recently it has been almost entirely ignored by media in the United States. But when the Chinese government opened a 30-day public comment period this spring, it received nearly 200,000 comments, the majority from ordinary workers. But some comments also came from big U.S.- and European-based global corporations and their lobbying groups. These powerful forces squarely opposed the new law.

Wal-Mart's recent agreement to recognize unions in China has made headlines worldwide. But Wal-Mart and other corporations, including Google, UPS, Microsoft, Nike, AT&T, and Intel, have acted through the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai (AmCham) and other industry associations to try to block Chinese legislation that would significantly increase the power and protection of workers.

This corporate campaign contradicts the justifications that have been given for public policies that encourage corporations to invest in China. U.S.-based corporations have repeatedly claimed to be raising human and labor rights standards abroad. For example, the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong asserts among its “universal principles” that “American business plays an important role as a catalyst for positive social change by promoting human welfare and guaranteeing to uphold the dignity of the workers and set positive examples for their remuneration, treatment, health, and safety.” But U.S.-based corporations are trying to block legislation designed specifically to improve the remuneration, treatment, health and safety, and other standards for Chinese workers.

At a time when China exerts a growing impact on the global economy, efforts to improve the conditions of Chinese workers are profoundly important for workers everywhere. As U.S. wages stagnate, many Americans worry that low wages and labor standards in China are driving down those in America. Improving labor conditions in China can thus help workers in the rest of the world resist a race to the bottom that threatens to bring global wages and conditions down to the level of the least protected.

China's proposed legislation will not eliminate its labor problems. The law will not provide Chinese workers with the right to independent trade unions with leaders of their own choosing and the right to strike. But foreign corporations are attacking the legislation not because it provides workers too little protection but because it provides them too much. Indeed, the proposed law may well encourage workers to organize to demand the enforcement of the rights it offers. And the prospect of independent, organized labor in China has pushed corporations to do some organizing of their own.

Corporate Campaign

The Chinese government released its Draft Labor Contract Law, whose proclaimed purpose is to protect workers' rights and interests, in April. The corporate campaign against the law began soon after, spearheaded by three major organizations representing foreign corporations operating in China: the American Chamber of Commerce in Shanghai (representing over 1,300 corporations, including 150 Fortune 500 companies), the U.S.-China Business Council (representing 250 U.S. companies doing business across all sectors in China), and the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China (representing more than 860 members). All three have sent the Chinese government extensive attacks on the proposed law. The statement of AmCham in Shanghai runs to 42 pages.

These organizations have also issued barely veiled threats that foreign companies will leave China if the new legislation is passed. According to AmCham comments on the draft legislation, the law may “reduce employment opportunities for PRC workers” and “negatively impact the PRC's competitiveness and appeal as a destination for foreign investment.”

“Business is attracted to China not only because of its labor costs but also because of its efficiency,” states Dr. Keyong Wu, an expert for the British Chambers of Commerce. “If regulation starts to affect that and flexibility, then companies could turn to India, Pakistan, and South-East Asia.”

American corporations have so much affection for the status quo in China that they have gone out of their way to preserve current Chinese labor law. As the AmCham document proclaims, that labor law has “significantly promoted standardized operation of enterprises and establishment of modern enterprise system.” AmCham criticizes the proposed changes in the law for making it harder to fire workers and for “rigid” restrictions on “business administration of enterprises,” and concludes that “we doubt whether it is necessary to carry out such significant changes.”

Why the Opposition?

The extraordinarily rapid growth of the Chinese economy has depended a great deal on foreign corporations. According to Morgan Stanley's chief economist Stephen Roach, 65% of the tripling of Chinese exports—from $121 billion in 1994 to $365 billion in mid-2003—is “traceable to outsourcing by Chinese subsidiaries of multinational corporations and joint ventures.”1 The export surge blamed on China is primarily an export surge of global corporations using low-wage Chinese workers. Foreign corporations thus fear that the law protecting Chinese workers may eliminate their cheap labor costs.

Foreign corporations have another, less obvious, motive for opposing protections for Chinese workers. The ability to hire cheap labor in China has put downward pressure on wages and workers' conditions around the globe. China plays a key role in setting global wage norms. It is the linchpin of what Morgan Stanley chief economist Stephen Roach has called “global labor arbitrage” in which corporations move from one labor market to another to take advantage of cheaper labor. The result is a global “race to the bottom” in which workers and their communities are put into competition with each other to see who can provide the lowest-cost labor and the most corporate-friendly conditions. According to Roach, this global labor arbitrage is also now acting as “a powerful structural depressant on traditional sources of job creation in high-wage countries such as the United States.”2

China's downward pressure on the world's wages is enormous. Harvard economist Richard Freeman estimates that the entry of India, Russia, and China into the world economy in the past few decades has doubled the workforce employed in the global economy. China alone accounts for 50% of this increase. And because these countries did not add significant capital to the global economy, more workers are competing to be employed by essentially the same amount of capital. This unbalanced equation has increased the bargaining power of capital, decreased that of labor, and substantially contributed to wage stagnation or decline in countries around the world. Chairman Ben Bernanke of the Federal Reserve Bank recently stated that the rapid integration of China, India, and the former Communist bloc into the world's economy in the space of a just a couple of decades has “no historical antecedents.”3

Andrew Ross of New York University, who recently spent a year in China studying how workers are coping with the rapid changes of the last decade, notes that foreign corporations can use the wages and working conditions in their Chinese operations to drive down labor conditions for workers at all levels worldwide:

No industrializing country has been able to compete for the top-end slot at the same time as it absorbs jobs lower down the production chain … To command this spread—from the lowest assembly platform work to the upper reaches of industry and services—is to be in a position to set the global norm for employee standards as never before. Given the chronic disregard for job security and workplace rights in China's foreign-invested private sector, such a norm is a clear threat to the stability of livelihoods everywhere.4

U.S. Responses

The exposure of the role of U.S.-based businesses in trying to block new rights for Chinese workers—in a report by Global Labor Strategies—has struck a responsive chord. A front-page article in The New York Times, drawing largely on the report, triggered a widespread discussion in the media, on blogs, and throughout the labor movement.

Members of the U.S. Congress quickly stepped forward to address the concerns raised by the report. U.S. Representatives Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), Barbara Lee (D-CA), George Miller (D-CA), Barney Frank (D-MA), and 23 other House members sent a letter to President Bush “protesting the efforts of U.S. corporations to undermine the most basic human rights of Chinese workers and block proposed new worker rights and labor standards protections in the proposed new Chinese labor law.”

According to Lynn Woolsey, “We are appalled that the American Chamber of Commerce in China and some of America's most-prestigious, brand-name corporations are leading efforts inside China to weaken, if not block altogether, significant worker rights and protection provisions in the proposed Chinese labor law. This shameful lobbying campaign is totally inconsistent with our country's long-standing commitment to promote respect for fundamental worker rights in law and practice everywhere. It is challenging enough for hard-working Americans to compete in the new global economy without having U.S. corporate leaders seeking to play them off against the least-protected and lowest-wage workers in the world.”

Specifically, the congressional letter calls upon President Bush to instruct the U.S. ambassador in China and the U.S. Trade Representative to deliver letters to Chinese government officials in support of worker rights and protection provisions in the Draft Labor Contract Law; repudiate the efforts of any U.S.-based corporations and their representatives doing business in China to weaken such provisions; and urge pertinent U.S.-based corporations and their representatives doing business in China to reverse their opposition and make clear their commitment to the universal rights of all Chinese workers and to improve their working conditions and living standards.

Both major U.S. trade union federations, the AFL-CIO and Change to Win, are planning to make the opposition of U.S. corporations to expanded rights for Chinese workers a significant focus of attention in upcoming political battles over the response to globalization.

Linking Workers

The spread of globalization brought U.S. companies to China. The media has often focused on how the Chinese government was suppressing workers' struggles and not enforcing existing labor law. But in a globalized world, the Chinese government is no longer the only or even the major actor in this regard. Global corporations or their subsidiaries and suppliers are exploiting millions of Chinese workers. Indeed, nearly two-thirds of the increase in “Chinese” exports actually represents non-Chinese corporations and their subsidiaries and suppliers.

Public policy in the United States and other countries has allowed these corporations to realize immense benefits from the low pay and poor conditions under which their Chinese workers work. These policies have been justified largely on the grounds that foreign corporations operating in China would elevate labor and human rights standards.

But these corporations have not raised the standards. And it is, ironically, the Chinese government that now wants to improve the situation, albeit in incremental ways. By opposing a labor contract reform law that would elevate labor and human rights standards, American and other foreign corporations are aggravating the very conditions they claimed they would ameliorate. Their campaign against the law blocks protections for Chinese workers and continues protections for corporations that would exploit them.

China's new labor bill faces a third reading this fall. If passed, it will come into full effect in March 2007. U.S., European, and other global corporations have already weighed in on the bill. They want it gutted.

Corporations and business organizations in China, and their political allies, should hold to their original promises to improve the conditions for Chinese workers. They should immediately reverse their opposition to the draft labor code and publicly support further legislation to ensure the basic human right of Chinese workers to organize, choose their own leaders, bargain collectively, and strike.

Here is an issue that links the interests of workers not only in the United States and China but everywhere. Higher wages, better working conditions, and the right to organize independent unions help workers everywhere to draw a line against the race to the bottom.

There is no need to travel to Beijing to fight for the rights of Chinese workers. The headquarters of the corporations opposing reforms for Chinese workers are in New York and Brussels, Los Angeles and London, and other cities and towns around the world. Washington, too, must make a choice. Will it support the rights of workers in China or the profits of U.S. corporations?

End Notes

  1. Stephen Roach, “How Global Labor Arbitrage Will Shape the World Economy,” Global Agenda, 2005 Edition.
  2. Stephen Roach, “False Recovery,” Global Economic Forum, Morgan Stanley, January 1, 2004.
  3. Krishna Guha, “Bernanke Calls for Fairer Globalization,” Financial Times, August 25, 2006.
  4. Andrew Ross, “A Fast Boat to China,” delivered at the Cornell Global Labor Conference on February 10, 2006. Ross is author of the book A Fast Boat to China: Corporate Flight and the Consequences of Free Trade; Lessons from Shanghai, (Pantheon, 2006).

Tim Costello, Brendan Smith, and Jeremy Brecher wrote the report Behind the Great Wall of China for Global Labor Strategies (http://www.laborstrategies.org//index.php?).

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2009, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Tim Costello, Brendan Smith, and Jeremy Brecher, "Labor Rights in China" (Silver City, NM and Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, December 21, 2006).

Web location:
http://fpif.org/fpiftxt/3824

Production Information:
Author(s): Tim Costello, Brendan Smith, and Jeremy Brecher
Editor(s): John Feffer, IRC
Production: Chellee Chase-Saiz, IRC

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name michael hunter Date: Dec 21, 2006
"The extraordinarily rapid growth of the Chinese economy has depended a great deal on foreign corporations." Foreign direct investment 1990-2004 about $540 billion. Estimates inflation-adjusted pay in cities doubled from 1990 to 2002. About 49 percent of households in the urban areas meet the middle class standard, but considering the large amount of families with lower incomes in the rural areas, the report reached the result that the middle class covers 19 percent of the total population. Thanks to favorable policies, the number of China's middle class has increased rapidly and will be accelerated in the future,the report shows. Based on the figures of 15 percent in 1999 and 19 percent in 2003, the percentage of middle class people in China is expected to reach 40 percent in 2020 under current economic growth condition

For all the wishful thinking of people "fighting" for "rights" the real sustained changes to peoples lives are jobs, investment, and return on capital. Yet your analysis fais to even mention these. By the way 4% is 60 million people achieving middle class status in 4 years. So much for exploitation by foreign corporations.

Name China Law Blog Date: Dec 23, 2006
Your article is biased and wrong. This law will cause some foreign companies to leave China, and not just big ones. However, that alone is certainly not a reason for not enacting the proposed law. What is a reason is that it will make it cost prohibitive to fire workers and this is the main aspect of the proposed laws to which foreign companies are objecting.
Name Catherine Gelb Date: Jan 02, 2007
To the Editor: Re: “Labor Rights in China” (December 21, 2006)

This commentary mistakenly asserts that US companies have launched a “corporate campaign” to “block” China’s proposed Labor Contract Law. Far from opposing the new measure, the US-China Business Council, which represents 250 US companies that do business in China, submitted comments on the draft Labor Contract Law to the Chinese government at its request that aim to make the new law more effective and balanced.

The US-China Business Council and its members share the goal of creating a Chinese work environment that is safe, fair, and stable. The overwhelming number of labor abuses occur in locally owned companies that do not share the more advanced labor relations standards that American corporations bring with them when they come to China. That last point cannot be stressed enough—American companies by and large are models for improving employment and environmental health and safety standards in China.

The Chinese government’s request for comments on the draft law was a significant step forward for increased regulatory transparency in China. The airing of different views should be encouraged as a normal--and integral--part of the drafting process.

Sincerely,
Catherine Gelb
Director, Communications and Publications
The US-China Business Council
1818 N Street, NW Suite 200
Washington, DC 20036
Tel: 202-429-0340
E-mail: cgelb@uschina.org

Name Richard Date: Jan 21, 2007
The above posters simplistically assume that all that matters is growth, that if a new policy doesn't give corporations an obvious and direct benefit, it's bad. So, to hell with people, to hell with society - they'll take care of themselves! From China Daily:

"If you ever feel mesmerized by the usual stuff you hear about China - 20% of the world's population, gazillions of brainy engineers, serried ranks of soldiers, 10% economic growth from now until the crack of doom - remember this: China is still a poor country (GDP per head in 2005 was $1,700, compared with $42,000 in the U.S.) whose leaders face so many problems that it is reasonable to wonder how they ever sleep.

"The country's urban labor market recently exceeded by 20% the number of new jobs created. Its pension system is nonexistent. China is an environmental dystopia, its cities' air foul beyond imagination and its clean water scarce. Corruption is endemic and growing. Protests and riots by rural workers are measured in the tens of thousands each year.

"The most immediate priority for China's leadership is less how to project itself internationally than how to maintain stability in a society that is going through the sort of social and economic change that, in the past, has led to chaos and violence."

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2007-01/18/content_786837.htm

From another article on China Daily:

"'The so-called Chinese middle class is nothing but a myth and a bubble conjured up by some media organizations and researchers,' Li Chunling, a CASS (Chinese Academy of Social Sciences) researcher, recently told the China Newsweek magazine.

"In late 2001, Li and her team conducted a study of 5,860 people aged between 16 and 70 in 12 provinces and municipalities, including Beijing, Shanghai, Zhejiang, Shandong, Guizhou and Inner Mongolia.

"Despite the lack of a real definition of 'middle class,' her study set out four criteria in the following categories: profession; monthly income; consumption and lifestyle; and subjective identity.

"The results of the study suggested that there are just over 35 million people in the country who meet all four criteria.

"'The notion of 'middle class' did not emerge in China until the mid-to-late 90s,' Li said.

"'How come so many people are now considering themselves middle class after such a short period of time?'

"The researcher warned that false prospects for social development could overshadow some pressing problems such as the widening income gap and soaring unemployment.

"Income disparity in China has widened after two decades of economic reform with the Gini coefficient - an international measurement of income disparity - having risen to 0.39, close to the international alarm level of 0.4.

"A zero Gini coefficient represents perfect equality and 1 indicates a complete monopoly of wealth by the privileged."

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/english/doc/2004-10/27/content_386060.htm

Name Daniel Date: Mar 08, 2007
The best way to sum it up is that if China enacts these laws, the corporations will move to another country, that will exploit their people, and start investing there. Governments don't exploit their people, but they do allow companies to do just that. They do then exploit the companies. Why would GM pay China to build a plant in Haiko and Alabama has to pay Mercedes Benz to build a plant in Birmingham? GM wants lots of cheap labor and Alabama wants lots of high paid taxpayers. There must be something to this cheap labor or automated plants would spring up all over the place that didn't have unions. If you wanted to build an automated plant that only had a few techs and repairmen you'd have to find a place that had zero population, 99.9% employment, or a government that they'd have to pay.
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