Posted on 03/04/2005 12:10:26 PM PST by Toddsterpatriot
Wal-Mart plans 10 new stores in China Firm aims to profit from new rules for foreign retailers
Updated: 11:51 a.m. ET Nov. 2, 2004BEIJING -
The worlds biggest retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc., said it planned at least 10 new stores in China next year, joining other foreign retail giants in taking advantage of new rules letting them move into smaller cities.
...Snip...
Last year, it sourced $15 billion worth of goods in low-cost China, from bicycles to fish. Scott said Chinese products made up about 80 percent of imports sold by Wal-Mart at its more than 3,200 U.S. outlets.
Copyright 2005 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of Reuters
(Excerpt) Read more at msnbc.msn.com ...
I scrolled through your posting history and couldn't find it, can you post it again, or direct me to the spot?
Oops! Forgot! The Chinese have all our money. Nevermind.
The world's largest retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc, says its inventory of stock produced in China is expected to hit US$18 billion this year, keeping the annual growth rate of over 20 per cent consistent over two years...snip....
Last year, the firm bought US$15 billion products from China, half from direct purchasing, the other from the firm's suppliers in China. ....snip.....
Xu declined to comment if the anti-dumpling measures of the US Department of Commerce have impacted the firm's procurement of textile commodities and household appliances in China, saying again that China is an important sourcing base for the firm.
So far, more than 70 per cent of the commodities sold in Wal-Mart are made in China......
Source:China Daily
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Hmmmmm.... jspb said "I posted a link to walmarts Chicom operations yesterday which clearly stated that over 70 percent of the community goods (textiles, household appliances, etc) that walmarts sells are manufactured in China."
That's not what the article says. Is he making stuff up again?
Are you making stuff up? Did you confuse "commodity" with "community?" And what makes you think that an appliance is a commodity?
Company/Label |
Factory in China |
Wages Per Hour |
Hours Per Week |
Conditions |
||||
Wal-Mart/Kathie Lee handbags |
Liang Shi Handbag Factory |
$0.13 to $0.23 |
60-70; 10-hr shifts 6-7 days a week |
No factory fire exits; dirty, cramped dorms. 10 to a room; for 70 hours a week, warehouse workers earn $3.44; no benefits; no legal work contract; workers have never heard of a Code of Conduct |
||||
Wal-Mart/Kathie Lee handbags |
Ya Li Handbag, Ltd. |
$0.18 to $0.28 |
60; plus overtime up to 16-hour shifts |
Forced overtime-stiff fines for refusal; overtime premium of 2 1/2 cents an hour; some workers not paid 3-4 months; 12 to a dorm room; no benefits, no work contract; never heard of a Code of Conduct |
||||
Wal-Mart/Kathie Lee |
Li Wen Factory |
$0.20 to $0.35 |
84; 12-hour shifts 7 days a week; mandatory 24-hour shifts during rush times |
Forced overtime, severe fines for refusal to comply; no benefits, no overtime rate; no fire exits in dormitories; no work contract; workers have never heard of a Code of Conduct |
||||
Wal-Mart |
Tianjin Yuhua Garment Factory |
$0.23 |
60 |
Wal-Mart is pulling out of this factory and other large publicly owned plants in the north to relocate its work to unregulated lower-wage privately owned sweatshops in the south of China |
||||
Ann Taylor and Preview |
Kang Yi Fashion Manufacturers |
$0.14 |
96; 7 days a week 7 a.m. to midnight |
Workers have never heard of a Code of Conduct; 6 to 10 workers in dorm rooms |
||||
Ralph Lauren, Ellen Tracy/Linda Allard |
Iris Fashions |
$0.20 |
72-80; 12-to-15 hour shifts; 6 days a week |
No union; workers paid a $0.06 an hour premium for overtime; paid $0.02 for each shirt collar sewn |
||||
Esprit Label (Esprit Group) |
You Li Fashion Factory |
$0.13 |
93; 7:30 a.m. to midnight; 7 days a week |
No overtime pay; no benefits; sometimes employees need to work 24-hour shifts; 6 to 8 people to a dorm room; dorm is dark and dirty; workers afraid; under constant surveillance; never heard of a corporate Code of Conduct |
||||
Liz Claiborne and Bugle Boy |
Shanghai Shirt 2d Factory |
$0.25 |
66; 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.; 6 days a week |
Employees fined if they don't work overtime; no union |
||||
Liz Claiborne |
Shanghai Jiang District Silk Fashions Ltd. |
$0.28 |
60-70; 11.5-hour shift; 6 days a week |
|
||||
J.C. Penney |
Zhong Mei Garment |
$0.18 |
78; 11-hour shifts; 7 days a week |
No union; no benefits; workers have never heard of J.C. Penney Corporate Code of Conduct |
||||
Kmart |
Shanghai No.4 Shirt Factory |
$0.28 |
70 |
|
||||
Cherokee Jeans |
Meiming Garment Factory |
$0.24 |
60-70 |
No benefits; workers have never heard of monitoring; 8 to a dorm room |
||||
Sears |
Tianjin Beifang Garment Factory |
$0.28 |
60 |
Sears is pulling out to relocate its production in lower-wage, unregulated sweatshops in the south |
||||
Structure/ The Limited |
Aoda Garment Factory |
$0.32 |
70 |
No union; 6 workers to a dorm room |
||||
Nike Athletic Shoes |
Wellco Factory |
$0.16 |
77-84; 11 - to -12 hour shifts; 7 days a week |
Workers fined if they refuse to work overtime; overtime rate not paid; hour shifts; most had no legal contract; humiliation, screaming, some corporal punishment; arbitrary fining of pregnant women and older (25 years old and up) women; fines if talking at work; approximately 10 children in the sewing section; most workers have never heard of Nike's Code of Conduct |
||||
Nike and Adidas Athletic Shoes |
Yue Yuen Factory |
$0.19 |
60-84 |
Forced overtime, no overtime premium paid; excessive noise pollution, fumes in the factory; no worker had heard of Nike or Adidas Corporate Code of Conduct |
||||
Adidas Garments |
Tung Tat Garment Factory |
$0.22 |
75-87.5; 12.5-hour Shifts; 6 or 7 days a week |
Employees fired if late/resting/found talking; forced morning calisthenics; 8 workers to a dorm room |
Source: "Company Profiles/Working Conditions: Factories in China Producing Goods for Export to the U.S.,"
"Made in China: Behind the Label," Charles Kernaghan of the National Labor Committee, March 1998. Wages are in U.S. dollars.
So you did make it up? And what's with the National Labor Committee? Comrades of yours?
Can't wait untill you are forced to work in conditions similar to those bought about by abandionmant of all but profit motive. It will be a just reward for you.
Catchy slogan. Is it Marx?
Nope it's mine, you see I have a brain and I know how to use it beyond just remembering talking points.
Talking points, huh? Such as the following, that you pulled out of your arse?
"I posted a link to walmarts Chicom operations yesterday which clearly stated that over 70 percent of the community goods (textiles, household appliances, etc) that walmarts sells are manufactured in China."
I would hope that you understand that you cannot guess someone's age from their posts on an Internet bulletin-board. Can I?
I have special powers. :^)
It's more than that. It is argued up and down these threads that the Chinese are poor, and don't have the money to buy stuff. If that was truly the case, then why does Wal-Mart have 40+ stores in China, and plans to open 10+ more?
Oil and iron ore.
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