In China, labour discontent over low wages and working conditions is under the spotlight. Angry workers have gone on strike in a number of factories owned by Taiwanese and Japanese companies.
There are worries that the labour unrest can potentially snowball into a major social crisis for the government as well as the industry. The issue has become so hot that China's premier Wen Jiabao has urged better treatment of particularly migrant workers.
Here are some of the stories doing the rounds in the local and international media:
Honda, which was hit by labour strikes in its China plants, says the company was surprised by the strike and that it needs to improve communication with employees. Honda's rival Japanese car maker Toyota says that it regularly talks to workers for better understanding of each other.
This story says that Taiwanese companies which have been at the core of Chinese industrial development over the last 30 years, are not heading home as labour unrest in China heralds an era of rising labour costs.
A New York Times story says that the current labour movement is China is independent of government-controlled unions, a trend with hugely political dimensions in a country where organising labour outside the government-controlled union is prohibited.
Honda workers are even demanding the right to form their own union, an unprecedented situation in China's labour market.
And this report predicts that the days of cheap labour in China are numbered now.
And this report suggests that rising labour costs will ultimately force factories to move closer to labour sources, and working conditions will become more humane. The report quotes a local expert as saying: "The biggest losers will be coastal governments that side with the factories to protect their revenues, if they refuse to change."
And this newspaper report in India hopes that China's loss will be India's gain.
Wall Street Journal reports that rising labor costs in China are forcing U.S. apparel and accessories retailers, such as AnnTaylor Stores Corp. and Coach Inc., to consider relocating at least some of their production to countries with cheaper work forces.
Langganan:
Posting Komentar (Atom)
Label
2011 News
Africa
AGRIBISNIS
Agriculture Business
Agriculture Land
APINDO
Argentina
Australia
Bangladesh
benih bermutu
benih kakao
benih kelapa
benih palsu
benih sawit
benih sawit unggul
Berita
Berita Detikcom
Berita Info Jambi
Berita Kompas
Berita Padang Ekspres
Berita Riau Pos
Berita riau terkini
Berita Riau Today
Berita Tempo
bibit sawit unggul
Biodiesel
biofuel
biogas
budidaya sawit
Bursa Malaysia
Cattle and Livestock
China
Cocoa
Company Profile
Corn
corporation
Cotton
CPO Tender Summary
Crude Palm Oil (CPO) and Palm Kernel Oil (PKO)
Dairy
Dairy Products
Edible Oil
Euorope
European Union (EU)
FDA and USDA
Fertilizer
Flood
Food Inflation
Food Security
Fruit
Futures
Futures Cocoa and Coffee
Futures Edible Oil
Futures Soybeans
Futures Wheat
Grain
HUKUM
India
Indonesia
Info Sawit
Investasi
Invitation
Jarak pagar
Kakao
Kapas
Karet
Kebun Sawit BUMN
Kebun Sawit Swasta
Kelapa sawit
Kopi
Law
Lowongan Kerja
Malaysia
Meat
MPOB
News
Nilam
Oil Palm
Oil Palm - Elaeis guineensis
Pakistan
palm oil
Palm Oil News
Panduan Pabrik Kelapa Sawit
pembelian benih sawit
Penawaran menarik
PENGUPAHAN
perburuhan
PERDA
pertanian
Pesticide and Herbicide
Poultry
REGULASI
Rice
RSPO
SAWIT
Serba-serbi
South America
soybean
Tebu
Technical Comment (CBOT Soyoil)
Technical Comment (DJI)
Technical Comment (FCPO)
Technical Comment (FKLI)
Technical Comment (KLSE)
Technical Comment (NYMEX Crude)
Technical Comment (SSE)
Technical Comment (USD/MYR)
Teknik Kimia
Thailand
Trader's Event
Trader's highlight
Ukraine
umum
USA
Usaha benih
varietas unggul
Vietnam
Wheat
0 comments:
Posting Komentar