Business Day

Apple, Foxconn break labour rule

• There are too many temporary staff in the world’s largest iPhone factory, and China Labor Watch says workers are exploited in other ways too

- Mark Gurman San Francisco

Apple and manufactur­ing partner Foxconn violated a Chinese labour rule by using too many temporary staff in the world’s largest iPhone factory.

Apple and manufactur­ing partner Foxconn violated a Chinese labour rule by using too many temporary staff in the world’s largest iPhone factory, the companies confirmed following a report that also alleged harsh working conditions.

The claims came from China Labor Watch (CLW), which issued the report ahead of an Apple event on Tuesday to announce new iPhones.

The nonprofit advocacy group investigat­es conditions in Chinese factories and says it has uncovered other alleged labour rights violations by Apple partners in the past.

For its latest report, CLW said that undercover investigat­ors worked in Foxconn’s Zhengzhou plant in China, including one who was employed there for four years.

One of the main findings was that temporary staff, who are known as dispatch workers, made up about 50% the workforce in August. Chinese labour law stipulates a maximum of 10%, CLW noted.

Apple said that after conducting an investigat­ion it found the “percentage of dispatch workers exceeded our standards” and that it is “working closely with Foxconn to resolve this issue”. It added that when it finds issues it works with suppliers to “take immediate corrective action”.

Foxconn Technology Group also confirmed the dispatch worker violation following an operationa­l review.

Apple’s supply chain has faced criticism over poor labour standards for years, and the company has pushed manufactur­ing partners to improve factory conditions or risk losing business. However, suppliers and assemblers are always trying to churn out more handsets.

Foxconn, officially known as Hon Hai Precision Industry, hires tens of thousands of temporary workers to ramp up production and meet iPhone demand during the key holiday season each year.

“Our recent findings on working conditions at Zhengzhou Foxconn highlight several issues which are in violation of Apple’s own code of conduct,” CLW wrote. “Apple has the responsibi­lity and capacity to make fundamenta­l improvemen­ts to the working conditions along its supply chain. However, Apple is now transferri­ng costs from the trade war through their suppliers to workers and profiting from the exploitati­on of Chinese workers.”

CLW was founded in 2000 to investigat­e Chinese factories that make toys, shoes, electronic­s and other products for some of the world’s largest multinatio­nal companies. It has an office in New York City and one in Shenzhen that offers a hotline for factory workers in China, according to its website.

While its report said 55% of factory staff were dispatch workers in 2018 and about 50% in August, this included student interns. Because many of these students returned to school at the end of August, that number is now closer to 30%, which is still a violation, according to CLW.

“We believe everyone in our supply chain should be treated with dignity and respect,” Apple said in a statement.

“To make sure our high standards are being adhered to, we have robust management systems in place beginning with training on workplace rights, on-site worker interviews, anonymous grievance channels and ongoing audits.”

Foxconn said it found “evidence that the use of dispatch workers and the number of hours of overtime work carried out by employees, which we have confirmed was always voluntary, was not consistent with company guidelines”.

It added that its “work to address the issues identified in our Zhengzhou facility continues and we will closely monitor the situation. We will not hesitate to take any additional steps that might be required to meet the high standards we set for our operations.”

Apple releases an annual supplier responsibi­lity report that details working conditions in its supply chain. In its latest report, Apple said it conducted 44,000 interviews with supplier employees last year to check if they were properly trained and knew how to voice concerns, while taking new steps to prevent forced labour.

In late 2017, Apple found that Foxconn had employed high school students who worked illegal overtime to assemble the iPhone X. Apple sent specialist­s to the facility to work with management on systems that ensured appropriat­e standards were followed.

Foxconn is the largest of a coterie of gadget assemblers that produce most of the world’s consumer electronic­s from sprawling Chinese bases.

Typically operating on waferthin margins, they employ millions of mostly migrant and temporary workers because activity tends to wax and wane with shopping seasons and fluctuatio­ns in demand.

Dispatch workers do not receive the benefits that fulltime employees get, such as paid sick leave, paid vacations and social insurance, which provides medical, unemployme­nt and pension coverage, according to CLW.

While base wages can be higher for dispatch workers, they are paid by third-party firms on a short-term basis and are not employed directly by Foxconn, CLW says.

Dispatch workers can become official factory workers after an initial three-month period, according to the report.

In August, Foxconn said it fired two executives at one of its Chinese plants after another CLW investigat­ion found the company was relying heavily on temporary workers and teenage interns to assemble Amazon.com Echo speakers. Foxconn reviewed the Hengyang facility and found the proportion of contract workers and student interns had on occasion exceeded legal thresholds and some interns had been allowed to work overtime or nights.

The group, which also monitors conditions in myriad industries from apparel to retail, has run reports in the past on suppliers to Nike and Adidas. Recently, it probed a factory that manufactur­ed Ivanka Trumpbrand­ed shoes.

Apple and Foxconn seek to produce about 12,000 iPhones per shift at the Zhengzhou factory, CLW’s latest report found. The 2018 iPhone XS models were more complex to build than the iPhone X, requiring more workers, the group said.

According to e-mails seen by Bloomberg, Apple told CLW in August that it was looking into the findings and had questions about the report. The company sent an investigat­or to the factory and met with Foxconn officials to discuss the heavy use of dispatch workers, but Apple and Foxconn are still allowing the activity despite violating the 10% standard, CLW said.

Apple said. “We have confirmed all workers are being compensate­d appropriat­ely, including any overtime wages and bonuses, all overtime work was voluntary and there was no evidence of forced labour.”

Apple said less than 1% of workers were student workers, and a small percentage of them voluntaril­y worked overtime or night shifts. Apple and Foxconn both said this issue has been corrected.

Most factory workers are paid about 4,000 yuan ($560) a month, one CLW investigat­or found. After taxes and mandatory fees, they get about 3,000 yuan a month, according to the CLW report.

China’s per capita disposable income was 28,228 yuan in 2018, or 2,352 yuan a month, China Daily reported earlier in 2019, citing government data.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Down time: A worker leaves a Foxconn factory in China. Apple and Foxconn aim to produce about 12,000 iPhones per shift at the Zhengzhou factory.
/Reuters Down time: A worker leaves a Foxconn factory in China. Apple and Foxconn aim to produce about 12,000 iPhones per shift at the Zhengzhou factory.

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