Dell is latest tech company accused of supplier labor violations in China

Posted:
in General Discussion edited January 2014
While media coverage of tech industry labor issues in the Far East often highlight Apple's involvement, other major electronics companies contract with the same suppliers. A new report this week now accuses a handful of suppliers for PC maker Dell of hiring underage workers in China.

Dell labor


The report from Danish watchdog group DanWatch claims that factories in Guangdong and Jiangsu have been employing underage workers, verbally abusing them, and requiring them to work long hours for amounts well below China's minimum wage. DanWatch collaborated on the report with China Labor Watch, an organization that has also been a frequent critic of the labor practices of Apple suppliers.

While DanWatch focused on Dell because it supplies computers to the Danish government, the suppliers in question also provide PC components for Asus, HP, Microsoft and Samsung. The report, which was highlighted on Friday by The Verge, claims many of the workers are students who are forced to work between 48 and 136 hours of overtime per month.

Dell responded to the accusations with a post to its official blog to say that it has already begun to take corrective action plans to address issues highlighted by the DanWatch report. The PC maker also plans to conduct a follow-up audit on all serious issues before any actions are considered closed.

"Challenges in the supply chain cannot be solved by one company alone," wrote Trisa Thompson, Dell vice president for corporate responsibility. "The best way to make lasting improvement in the supply chain is to work together with our industry partners to collectively implement accountability measures through third-party audits, common tools and best practices."

The allegations against Dell come just as Apple has found itself linked to yet another supplier accused of labor relations. This week it was said that Flextronics hired indentured servants in the weeks before the release of the iPhone 5, forcing migrant workers to pay more than a half a year's salary --?far more than is allowed by Apple -- in order to secure a job in another country.

Audit
Worker prepares iPhone for final assembly. | Source: Apple Supplier Responsibility Report


As criticism of foreign labor practices has grown, Apple has stayed proactive on the issue, and became the first technology company to join the Fair Labor Association for independent auditing of its partners in the Far East. The biggest target associated with Apple has been Foxconn, a company that is responsible for assembling a significant portion of the Cupertino, Calif., outfit's products.

Apple also publishes an annual Supplier Responsibility Report, and has continually pressed its suppliers to improve their labor operations over the past few years, going so far as to terminate a contract with one supplier found to be using underage workers. Among Apple's suppliers, 99 percent of the more than one million-strong workforce do not work excessive hours.

Of course, concerns over labor in the Far East are not restricted to Apple and Dell, as other tech companies have also been publicly linked to labor issues in the area. For example, Apple's rival Samsung became the target of a China Labor Watch report last year, and the South Korean electronics maker responded by vowing to fix alleged labor violations.
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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 39

    This can’t be right… Someone misspelled ‘Apple’ in the title!

  • Reply 2 of 39
    john.bjohn.b Posts: 2,742member
    I thought all manufacturers other than Apple got a pass on this? Did DanWatch not get the memo?

    /sarcasm
  • Reply 3 of 39
    rob53rob53 Posts: 3,251member
    Luckily, this PC supplier doesn't appear to be supplying components to Apple although I'm sure someone will say they do and bring Apple into the problem. It doesn't matter what Apple does, they are always wrong in the eyes of certain people and any association these people can make, whether it's true or false, hurts Apple. Of course, no court will find the false accusations libelous so they keep making them.
  • Reply 4 of 39
    jungmarkjungmark Posts: 6,926member
    "Silly Danes, only Apple has labor violations in Asia." - editor of the NYT
  • Reply 5 of 39

    Who?

  • Reply 6 of 39
    kpluckkpluck Posts: 500member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Tallest Skil View Post

     

    This can’t be right… Someone misspelled ‘Apple’ in the title!


     

    :D

     

    -kpluck

  • Reply 7 of 39
    The publication chose to focus on Dell because Dell sold computers to the Danish government. Talk about turning a blind eye to the problem!

    Every company in the article is a part of the problem, but only Dell is in the spotlight. The other companies can have the same problems as Dell, but they get to stay out of the spotlight because they do not sell computers to the Danish government.

    Does this mean if Dell stopped selling those computers the publication would consider the use of under aged workers okay and not report anything about the abuse?
  • Reply 8 of 39
    This is what Globalization meant, is was NOT a good thing, it was a way for the Greedy mofos at the top to make even MORE profit.
    As long as we put dollars before people, we are doomed.

    Doomed just like Apple.
  • Reply 9 of 39
    Okay let's just get this out in the clear – if something is made in China, which is what... everything these days, then every product is most likely in violation of labor codes. Now can we move onto real news please?
  • Reply 10 of 39
    lkrupplkrupp Posts: 10,557member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by msheredy View Post



    Okay let's just get this out in the clear – if something is made in China, which is what... everything these days, then every product is most likely in violation of labor codes. Now can we move onto real news please?

    You are right, of course, but yellow journalists continue to present this as an “Apple only” problem. And no one seems to see the hypocrisy of calling for a boycott on Apple products while continuing to use other Chinese manufactured products.

  • Reply 11 of 39
    drblankdrblank Posts: 3,385member
    This is just BS. I had a job before i turned 18. I was working almost full time while in high school. The store I worked at had plenty of people that were 16 and 17 years old. There were probably 7 or 8 of us under 18 out of 30 employees.

    Dell and Apple, etc. are not in any violation, it's the outsource companies that do the hiring, so if there are any violations, it's the outsource company and companies like Dell, Apple, etc. can't control what these companies do 100% of the time because they aren't running the companies.
  • Reply 12 of 39
    drblankdrblank Posts: 3,385member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by alienzed View Post



    This is what Globalization meant, is was NOT a good thing, it was a way for the Greedy mofos at the top to make even MORE profit.

    As long as we put dollars before people, we are doomed.



    Doomed just like Apple.

    If they didn't go to other countries, we wouldn't have the products we have and take for granted.  They can ramp up production much faster since there are more people there willing to do the work.  They have more people in concentrated areas.

     

    Where in this country could they hire and get up to speed 90,000 people willing to work for minimum wage and be able to ramp up within a couple of months?  In Silicon Valley?  Texas?  Mid West?  Yeah, right.  It takes much longer to ramp up production for this type of work.

     

    Yeah, Apple's starting to make the MacPros in the US, but they have to have different parts made in different parts of the country and use a LOT of robots which are overseen by people.  But they can't do that with mobile devices and laptops, yet. 

     

    I think the iMacs, MacMinis will be next to be made in the USA, but it may take a while for iPads and iPhones.  Maybe eventually they will, but not right now.

     

    Land is cheap in China, labor is cheap in China and the US mfg have to compete with the foreign mfg that also use similar companies to do the assembly work.

  • Reply 13 of 39
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by msheredy View Post



    Okay let's just get this out in the clear – if something is made in China, which is what... everything these days, then every product is most likely in violation of labor codes. Now can we move onto real news please?

    Absolutely.  We tend to turn a blind eye to indentured slavery at factories in the Far East, whether it's China or one of the other countries.   Unfortunately, way too many people simply don't care.   For companies like Apple and Dell and the rest, it is very difficult to track down the abuse, much less do anything about it.  They make huge profits helped by near slave labor and their stockholders expect it to work that way.

  • Reply 15 of 39

    I thought only Apple was targeted in these reports. So much for that narrative. But then, I am sure the troops herein won't let facts get into the way of a perfectly fine whine.

  • Reply 16 of 39
    LOL. This article is trying to spread blame around for Apple's cruelty and evil. Mike Daisey is appalled anyone would smear little old Dell. /s
  • Reply 17 of 39
    hill60hill60 Posts: 6,992member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AppleInsider View Post





    "Challenges in the supply chain cannot be solved by one company alone," wrote Trisa Thompson, Dell vice president for corporate responsibility. "The best way to make lasting improvement in the supply chain is to work together with our industry partners to collectively implement accountability measures through third-party audits, common tools and best practices."

     

    Says someone who was quite happy to sit idly by while Apple was that "one company".

     

    The writing was on the wall years ago, it's a bit late to start fixing things now.

     

    Enough of the bullshit excuses.

  • Reply 18 of 39
    aoa1aoa1 Posts: 28member

    Really?

    No mentioning of these recent events?

    This page really is the Pravda of the tech-world...

     

    Well, here are un-censored Apple Insights:

     

    iPad Air EXPLODES INTO FIREBALL as terrified fanbois flee Apple Store 

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/nov/8/ipad-explodes-setting-australian-store-customers-f/

     

    and this:

     

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/07/apfelkind-cafe-trademark-battle-apple-germany

     

    ("The key factor that inspired Römer to fight back was a gagging clause. At first the US company had offered a compromise whereby she could use the Apfelkind logo on her own franchise products but not on any electronic equipment.")

  • Reply 19 of 39
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by AOA1 View Post

     

    Really?

    No mentioning of these recent events?

    This page really is the Pravda of the tech-world...

     

    Well, here are un-censored Apple Insights:

     

    iPad Air EXPLODES INTO FIREBALL as terrified fanbois flee Apple Store 

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2013/nov/8/ipad-explodes-setting-australian-store-customers-f/

     

    and this:

     

    http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/oct/07/apfelkind-cafe-trademark-battle-apple-germany

     

    ("The key factor that inspired Römer to fight back was a gagging clause. At first the US company had offered a compromise whereby she could use the Apfelkind logo on her own franchise products but not on any electronic equipment.")


     

    Amazing ... just joined, multiple postings of the same garbage. Congratulations!  You're the newest Troll Of The Hour!

  • Reply 20 of 39
    aoa1aoa1 Posts: 28member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Dave MacLachlan View Post

     

     

    Amazing ... just joined, multiple postings of the same garbage. Congratulations!  You're the newest Troll Of The Hour!


     

    What you fanbois call trolling, normal adults call the un-censored truth.

     

    "An Apple iApparatchik was straight on the scene to work out why the Air had caught fire."

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