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Mattel’s Real Toy Story: Slave Labour in Sweatshops
This is London ^ | August 16, 2007 | This is London

Posted on 08/15/2007 6:31:17 PM PDT by JACKRUSSELL

This week Mattel recalled nearly two million Chinese-made toys over concerns they contain excessive levels of lead paint and loose parts.

Dirt-cheap labour and a massive expansion in capacity means China makes more than three-quarters of the world's toys, with an export value in excess of £7 billion.

But increasingly, there is evidence of inadequate safety standards, poor quality control and slave labour.

Here, in an extract from his book about the toy industry, Eric Clark reveals the real cost of cheap toys from China.

Behind high fences, sprawling factory compounds stretch mile after dusty, depressing mile along the congested roads.

Guarded gates control entry and exit.

Adjoining many of the blocks are identical concrete boxes - the washing at the chicken wire-covered windows, adding flashes of colour, is the only indication that these are the dormitories for workers.

Here in the Pearl River Delta, China, the pollution levels are on average two or three times those permitted in the West.

But without places like this, with its swirling red dust, toxic rivers and thick, choking smog that hovers everywhere, stinging eyes and throats, the modern toy industry would not exist.

This is the hidden face of the trade where toys are produced for a few pence each by vast numbers of young Chinese people toiling in sweatshop conditions.

Between shifts the workers, mostly young women, their faces set in exhaustion, shuffle from building to building.

Shifts can last more than 15 hours a day, seven days a week - unlawful but far from uncommon.

The dominance of China in toy production is staggering.

There are about 8,000 factories employing some three million workers spread over six areas, of which the Pearl River Delta is by far the largest.

Virtually all the familiar Western toy names - led by U.S. giants Mattel and Hasbro - are made here. These workers make 80 per cent of all America's toys.

In children's picture books, Santa's beaming elves may still be making the toys, but the reality is that for elves we should read migrants - millions of them who have travelled by bus from rural areas up to three days' journey away, part of the biggest movement of people in human history.

Since the migration began, more than 50 million have passed through the factories of Guangdong province, where the Pearl River Delta lies.

If it is almost impossible to comprehend the scale of the movement of people, it is even more difficult for a Westerner to imagine the daily life of one of these toy workers.

Conditions obviously vary, from the acceptable to the unimaginably awful, but it is possible, from a host of reports and interviews conducted well away from factory premises, to construct a composite of the life and working conditions of one of the workers.

Li Mei is worn out, so she looks older than her 18 years.

Her skin is bad from too little daylight and she has many healing and still-open cuts on her hands.

Her neck, chest and forearms are heavily mottled with the raised red patches of allergy caused by toxic chemicals, which she scratches as she speaks.

She coughs a lot, and has chronic aches and pains, frequent headaches and blurred vision.

All these ailments have appeared during the past two years.

Li Mei is a migrant from the rural province of Western Sichuan.

At first, she is thrilled to be one of the dagongmei - the working girls - and to leave the hamlet where there are no roads and only limited electricity.

But she is frightened because the factories have a reputation as sweatshops. Many return with disfigurements and illnesses.

And there was the fate of Li Chunmei.

Lin Chunmei, 19, was a 'runner' in the Bainan Toy Factory, rushing stuffed animals from one worker to the next for each step in production.

It was said she ran 16 hours a day, seven days a week, for two solid months.

Lin Chunmei was paid the equivalent of 7 pence an hour.

She collapsed one night, bleeding from nose and mouth, and was found hours later. She died before the ambulance arrived. Her parents were told it was an 'unknown death' and received a small sum in compensation.

But the villagers said it was the new disease, death from overwork.

Li Mei is certain nothing like this will happen to her: she is strong, accustomed to physically demanding tasks such as drawing water and cutting wood.

Her parents have borrowed heavily to buy the various personal documents she needs.

In four or five years, she plans to go home, buy a house and get married. She thinks about this all the time.

The factory where she toils is one of three buildings in a compound with high fences and a sliding metal gate, where two guards check everyone going in and out.

Beside it stands a warehouse and dormitory block. Li Mei's dormitory is on the eighth floor, a small room about 12 by 23 feet.

There are 32 rooms like it on this floor.

It is lit by a single fluorescent bar - her wages have the electricity costs docked - and the floor is concrete.

Double and triple bunk beds made of metal take up every inch of wall space.

During peak periods, when the factory takes on extra staff, girls often sleep two to a single bed.

Under the window, a grubby sink has a single tap. A notice is stuck to the wall, rules which another girl reads to her.

There are many, so she can remember only a few: 'No step on grass, offenders will be fined 50 yuan (£3.30).'

'No male or female staff going to the other gender's dormitory. The offender will be fired.'

Li Mei waits in a long queue of girls for the bathroom that two dozen people use to shower and wash their clothes.

She is still there at midnight, when everyone in the village has long been asleep, but the workers are only just off shift, too tired even to grumble as they wait in line.

Sometimes, the girl beside her says, 'there is no water even to brush your teeth, and the toilet is horrible.' The water (which, like lavatory paper, Li Mei is charged for) is cold.

By 2am she is finally in her lower bunk bed, separated from the hard surface by a straw mat even thinner than the one she uses at home.

Next morning she has no breakfast, for it is a meal she has to buy and prepare herself.

At 7.30am, in factory uniform of blue blouse with a white collar over trousers with her ID card displayed (she would be fined two days' wages if it was lost), she follows her guide through passages lined with cardboard boxes.

The air in the spraying and colouring department is filled with paint dust and smells sourly of chemicals -acetone, ethylene, trichloride, benzene.

The windows are fitted with wire mesh, the exits locked to prevent pilfering.

Noisy ventilators add to the din of the machines so the team leader has to shout to be heard.

Li Mei is given a blue apron and shown how to paint the eyes of the dolls with four pens of different sizes: she has to paint one every 7.2 seconds - 4,000 a day.

By the end of the second day, Li Mei's cotton mask and gloves are thick with paint particles and difficult to use.

She asks for new ones but is refused.

During the first few days, she finds the heat combined with the smell of chemicals repulsive.

She feels sick, has stomach-aches and is dizzy.

Once, when she faints, her section leader tells her to rest, rub on some herbal ointment then return to work.

Li Mei sneezes constantly and her eyes stream.

The bosses move her to the moulding department.

She feels a blast of heat - she is told later it rises to 104F - when the door is opened.

She is told to watch the other workers and then begins to stamp out parts of plastic dolls with repetitive movements performed many times a minute, 3,000 times a day.

Gloves are issued but no one can wear them - it is unbearably hot and they make it difficult to handle the tiny plastic parts: once the production line starts, her hands and eyes cannot stop for a minute.

Li Mei has to learn a lot of rules because she will be fined for any infringement.

Her section leader tells her there is to be no chatting, joking, laughing or quarrelling.

She must not disturb anyone's work, nap, or read a newspaper.

She must not fail to punch her work card, nor must she punch in for another worker.

She will lose two hours' wages for each minute she is late, and for half an hour she will lose a day's pay. For poor quality work, she may be dismissed or fined.

So she works carefully - and that means too slowly, so she is fined two days' pay.

Like most workers, Li Mei knows within a month that she is being unlawfully exploited.

She soon has wounds on her hands and elbows, and burn marks on her uniform.

When she is moved to a job trimming the plastic toys with small sharp knives, she often cuts herself, once so badly that her hand bleeds heavily - but the medical box is locked.

So she binds the wound up in cloth.

Worse things happen: workers in the die-casting and moulding departments lose fingers and even arms, while hole-making workers often have their hands punctured and crushed because they have no reinforced gloves.

With her tiny pay and all her debts, Li Mei cannot save.

She cannot resign from the factory but must apply for 'voluntary automatic leave'.

This means she would be severing the 'work contract' at her request.

As punishment she must forfeit one-and-a-half months' wages.

Without that, she does not have enough for the fare home. Li Mei says: "I'm tired to death and I don't earn much.

"It makes everything meaningless." All she can do is go on.

"When we are working at the factory, we belong to the factory."

The American toy industry dominates the whole of the globe.

It is a $22 billion business. Every year it puts almost 3.6 billion toys into the home market alone, including 76 million dolls, 349 million plush toys, 125 million action figures, 279 million Hot Wheels and Matchbox cars.

Yet the toy business is no longer fun and games.

It's a harsh, corporate world, driven by social and demographic changes, concerns about stock prices and fierce battles between global brands.

By law, the maximum any Chinese worker should be on the assembly line is 53 hours per week.

But the China Labour Bulletin, a Hong Kong-based journal supporting independent unions and workers' rights, says 80 hours is common.

"Mattel has no way to know the truth about what really goes on here," said one worker. "Every time there is an inspection, the bosses tell us what lies to say."

This was supported by others who said that managers promised them extra pay if they pretended that they worked only eight hours a day, six days a week.

One government official, speaking on condition of anonymity, revealed that when government officers or foreign business executives visit the factories, the managers are tipped off beforehand and under-age workers are sent home.

In August 2006, the Chinese press carried the story of a female migrant worker who died from brain-stem bleeding after reportedly working non-stop for 21 hours in a toy factory in Zengzheng county in Guangzhou.

But it is unrealistic to expect that Chinese manufacturers will voluntarily improve conditions for workers.

The crux of the problem is this: by demanding that their suppliers produce goods at ever cheaper prices and demanding deadlines, the toy industry is almost forcing them to act illegally, despite the codes of practice it struggles to impose on them.

For consumers, this presents a dilemma which was neatly summed up for me by a couple pushing a loaded trolley down the toy aisles of a large superstore last Christmas.

"They're probably made under awful conditions but what do you do?" they asked. "Accept it, or leave the kids with nothing."

The answer is not a boycott of Chinese toys.

Forcing factories to close and throwing millions of people out of work would harm the very people it was meant to help.

Instead, we must protest to the toy companies that we won't accept playthings for our kids which have been produced under horrific conditions and at the expense of workers.

After all, as this week's recall of Chinese-made toys shows, we too could end up paying a high price just for the benefit of buying cheap toys.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: chicoms; china; communism; fascism; freetrade; globalism; madeinchina; slaves; toxicchina; workersparadise
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To: cripplecreek

Yep! My buddy just got back. RPGs missle, ammo, the lot.


21 posted on 08/15/2007 7:37:22 PM PDT by Eagles6
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To: Dysart

“I went out this evening to buy a spray nozzle for my garden hose at Big Lots,”

Maybe you won’t make the mistake of ever shopping there again. It is worse than Wal-Mart!


22 posted on 08/15/2007 7:37:56 PM PDT by acoulterfan
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To: Eagles6

It’s almost like fighting a proxy war like we did for years with Russia. The difference is that we weren’t paying Russia to fight it.


23 posted on 08/15/2007 7:39:42 PM PDT by cripplecreek (Greed is NOT a conservative ideal.)
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To: cripplecreek

Give the man a cigar!


24 posted on 08/15/2007 7:40:45 PM PDT by Eagles6
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To: cripplecreek

a real parent is having more and more trouble finding toys that are NOT made in china.

Legos appear to be still made in europe (denmark and e. europe, though I may be wrong).

Are there other major brands that are absolutely not made in china?


25 posted on 08/15/2007 7:40:51 PM PDT by WoofDog123
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To: Ramius

“But much of it too is just union hype. The unions that chased those jobs overseas in the first place.”

I doubt the unions expect to ever see these jobs here again. A more likely scenario (besides this quietly going away) is for overseas manufacture to move to countries with names other than China.

The US simply cannot compete domestically with cost of goods in some asian countries and India. They are orders of magnitude cheaper, not some small %.


26 posted on 08/15/2007 7:42:54 PM PDT by WoofDog123
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To: WoofDog123

Definitely better to buy from Europe. I grew up poor so I didn’t have a lot of toys and I’m starting to think that it was a good thing.


27 posted on 08/15/2007 7:43:16 PM PDT by cripplecreek (Greed is NOT a conservative ideal.)
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To: WoofDog123

Probably 80% of the jobs we lost in my part of michigan over the last 20 years were non union jobs.


28 posted on 08/15/2007 7:47:28 PM PDT by cripplecreek (Greed is NOT a conservative ideal.)
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To: cripplecreek

“....Chinese weapons finding their way into Iraq by way of Iran.”

Weapons that were made using American dollars are killing our sons and brothers/sisters in Iraq.

We are marching to the gallows wearing communist slave-labor made sneakers.


29 posted on 08/15/2007 8:10:23 PM PDT by panaxanax (Ronald Reagan would vote for Duncan Hunter!)
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To: WoofDog123

“Unfortunately, we found out that quite a few European toys are made in China as well,” Cho said.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1881840/posts


30 posted on 08/15/2007 8:12:04 PM PDT by JACKRUSSELL
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To: JACKRUSSELL

So why in the hell are we buying toys from these idiots?...Excuse me I see!...big business and George Bush planned it that way......


31 posted on 08/15/2007 8:14:23 PM PDT by AngelesCrestHighway
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To: Westlander

Made in USA
ussstuff.com

madeinusa.com

stillmadeinusa.com


32 posted on 08/15/2007 8:20:33 PM PDT by sweetiepiezer (Part of the RIGHT-Wing Machine.)
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To: WoofDog123

Our son is a Legomaniac. I always felt comfortable buying them as I thought they were made in Denmark.

Your comments prompted me to do an internet search. It seems they too have been outsourcing their manufacturing to Mexico, China and the Czech Republic since 2005.

Dang!


33 posted on 08/15/2007 8:21:06 PM PDT by mplsconservative
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To: vetsvette

“There is no doubt that all of this is true — but, it’s also true that most Chinese workers would rather have those jobs than the alternatives that are available to them.’

It’s within living memory that the Chinese couldn’t even feed themselves. Muckraking sensationalist reporting doesn’t dwell on that.


34 posted on 08/15/2007 8:22:33 PM PDT by gcruse (Let's strike Iran while it's hot.)
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To: Eagles6

Now they are unconcerned about slavery of Chinese or Vietnamese as long as the have access to cheap crap.

The only reason that communism is still a threat is because of the hard currency we give them. If it weren’t for that they would have imploded like the USSR

It’s not slavery, it’s Socialist Workers’ Paradise!/s

Some pundits claim that the Chinese have abandoned communism, and embraced the free market system. One Airhead America type even claimed that China now exhibits “the worst characteristics of capitalism after abandoning socialism”. (Thom Hartmann).
Fact is that the Chinese government only tolerates what faintly resembles a market economy thanks to the hard currency it provides the government. There are still government owned factories, and business and factories owned by the People’s Liberation Army (there are even whorehouses owned by the PLA!). All this mainly to engage in economic warfare against the West (asymmetric warfare?) and also to buy more “toys” for the PLA (Flankers, Sovremmennyys, etc).


35 posted on 08/15/2007 8:33:33 PM PDT by Fred Hayek (Liberalism is a mental disorder)
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To: gcruse

Having those jobs is not the point...sending us garbage is....


36 posted on 08/15/2007 8:33:48 PM PDT by AngelesCrestHighway
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To: AngelesCrestHighway

?Having those jobs is not the point...sending us garbage is....?

No, the article itself disputes that. It says, “The answer is not a boycott of Chinese toys.”

The article is a latter day version of Grapes of Wrath.


37 posted on 08/15/2007 8:45:58 PM PDT by gcruse (Let's strike Iran while it's hot.)
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To: Fred Hayek

Yep, what you said.


38 posted on 08/15/2007 8:53:51 PM PDT by Eagles6
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To: All
Rush Limbaugh said "One of the ways that you destroy a totalitarian regime is by trading with it, or introducing capitalism. 14 Aug., 2007

I think Rush needs to adjust his aim a little, too much collateral damage here. But hey! we're getting there and boy are the toys cheap!

39 posted on 08/15/2007 8:56:18 PM PDT by WilliamofCarmichael (If modern America's Man on Horseback is out there, Get on the damn horse already!)
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To: vetsvette

I just don’t buy that excuse. I am not disputing the wages no doubt are good compared to other jobs. But no one should have to work in such horrible conditions. As a Christian I believe that we are made in the image of God. When any person is abused, enslaved and tortured; his suffering is an affront to God Himself. Even the poorest of persons should not have to put his life at risk just so some child can have Barbie’s Malibu Repo House.

I agree that a boycott is not the answer as that would hurt the very people who have to work in these factories. At the very least the Chinese Government could start enforcing the work hour limits. They could ban the practice of fining workers as mentioned in the article. They could forbid the forfeiting of paid wages when a person leaves the job. But considering China’s human rights’ record that is probably a pipe dream. If their is any moral voice in China it probably is languishing in prison.

I honestly do not know what the answer is, I only know that cheap toys are way too costly.


40 posted on 08/15/2007 9:24:42 PM PDT by lastchance (Hug your babies.)
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