China’s Workers Are Fighting Back as Economic Dream Fades
For workers like Li Jiang, factory closings represent a failed promise 
of a better life earned far from home
By MARK MAGNIER

SHENZHEN, China— Li Jiang’s journey from village rice fields to a 
concrete dorm room of snoring men has played out millions of times as 
migrant workers have reached for a piece of the China dream.

That dream evaporated in October for Mr. Li. After a decade in this 
coastal city, he returned to Fuchang Electronic Technology Co. from a 
weeklong holiday to find the maker of cellphone bodies and set-top boxes 
had stopped production, leaving him and five family members jobless. In 
notices on the factory gate, Fuchang blamed a credit squeeze and its own 
bad management.

With no word on severance, Mr. Li and some 1,000 of Fuchang’s workers 
took to the streets. The next day, 3,000 protested, workers and labor 
activists say, fueled by worker anger and social media. “I kept calling 
people to join,” says 30-year-old Mr. Li. “The more the better to build 
our strength.”

The Fuchang protest was part of a new wave of labor strife hitting 
China, one that is larger and angrier than previous rounds, labor 
experts say.

The Hong Kong-based civic group China Labour Bulletin says strikes and 
labor protests nationwide nearly doubled in the first 11 months of 2015 
to 2,354 from 1,207 in the same 2014 period. China’s labor ministry says 
1.56 million labor-dispute cases were accepted for arbitration and 
mediation in 2014, up from 1.5 million in 2013.

Behind the strife is an economy decelerating faster than the government 
expected, sparking layoffs and factory closings. Economists say China 
has struggled to reach its 2015 growth target of about 7%, its slowest 
pace in 25 years, and most project slower growth next year.

China doesn’t release statistics on factory closings. The number of 
factories owned by Hong Kong companies in southern Guangdong province, 
where Shenzhen is located, fell by a third to 32,000 in 2013 from a 2006 
peak, according to an analysis by Justina Yung of Hong Kong Polytechnic 
University for the Federation of Hong Kong Industries, a trade group.

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For workers like Mr. Li, such closings represent a failed promise, the 
fraying of a social compact in China under which migrants accepted 
grueling shift work and spartan living conditions far from home in 
exchange for prospects of a better future.

“Migrant workers have really helped build China, but our rights aren’t 
protected,” says Mr. Li. “We’re discriminated against, and wealth in 
society is not fairly distributed.”

Fuchang eventually offered Mr. Li and his fellow workers a partial 
settlement, and the protests subsided. But the bitterness isn’t 
dissipating. Some workers have taken Fuchang to arbitration tribunals. 
Though Mr. Li and one relative eventually found jobs in the city at 
comparable pay, they say working hours and conditions are worse. His 
wife, brother, sister-in-law and cousin remain unemployed.

Liu Zehua, a lawyer representing Fuchang and its majority owner, Chen 
Jinse, says Mr. Chen “is very honest and diligent…But he has limited 
management abilities. Fuchang’s management wasted money leading to the 
company’s eventual decline.”

Desperate workers
Early in China’s slowdown, its economy was able to absorb many laborers 
like Mr. Li and his family. But as the downturn lingers, layoffs are 
becoming more common and desperate workers are finding few new 
opportunities—a trend officials and labor experts say is gathering momentum.

ENLARGE
Factory employment in China has fallen for 25 months, according to a 
business-sentiment index released by Caixin, a Chinese magazine. China’s 
labor ministry says it expects employment to remain stable near term but 
says the impact of China’s slowdown and restructuring can’t be ignored. 
China’s Ministry of Public Security didn’t respond to inquiries.

Chinese researchers and business executives say chances are rising that 
the Communist government may face the kind of social unrest that it has 
long feared. Chinese authorities recently detained and interrogated over 
a dozen labor activists, mainly in Guangdong.

“They definitely see protests as threatening social security, and are 
concerned,” says Anita Chan, a visiting fellow with the Political and 
Social Change Department of Australian National University.

In another recent case, up the Pearl River Delta from Fuchang, an 
October strike by some 270 workers at circuit-board maker Accurate 
Electronic Co. over back pay descended into fights between workers and 
police, including 40 antiterrorism officers holding shields, say workers 
and labor activists.

Worker Yang Changsheng says he was videotaping the protest when police 
started beating his colleagues and he urged them to stop. Officers 
grabbed and punched him, he says, detaining him and other workers for 15 
hours.

Accurate Electronic officials declined to comment, as did police and 
officials in Dongguan, where the company is based. An official at the 
Dongguan branch of the government-controlled All China Federation of 
Trade Unions says the Accurate case was largely settled.

Elsewhere, workers are lashing back by detaining company officials. 
Executives are being seized after layoff announcements in greater 
numbers than before, says M. Sean Molloy, Shanghai-based managing 
director of Control Risks, a London crisis-management consultancy.

One European executive says workers held him after his industrial 
company, a foreign concern’s Chinese arm, announced a restructuring in 
February in Tianjin. The workers blocked the factory gate with a 
forklift and videotaped everything he said, hoping to exhaust him. 
Police freed him at 3 a.m. after 15 hours, he says.

“We need to help workers find jobs, otherwise they’ll be forced to act 
illegally,” says Zou Suojun, a former director of a Dongguan-based 
electronic-parts unit of Hong Kong’s Plainvim International Ltd. Mr. Zou 
says workers at the Dongguan factory held him seven days in late 2013, 
beating him and banging a drum to deprive him of sleep.

Strikes and worker protests like this one are on the rise this year in 
the southern Chinese industrial hub of Guangdong province, as factories 
close and lay off workers amid the slowing economy. ENLARGE
Strikes and worker protests like this one are on the rise this year in 
the southern Chinese industrial hub of Guangdong province, as factories 
close and lay off workers amid the slowing economy. PHOTO: 
IMAGINECHINA/ASSOCIATED PRESS
“If the economy keeps going this way,” he says, “we’ll have serious 
social unrest in a couple of years.” Plainvim officials declined to 
comment. A Plainvim employee confirms the details of Mr. Zou’s 
detention, saying it was understandable: “They were very emotional.”

Migrants like Mr. Li provided the sweat behind the China miracle, 
leaving farms in the hundreds of millions to build highways and housing 
and to assemble everything from shoes to iPhones. For many, the bright 
economic promise was worth even leaving children far away.

Mr. Li’s journey
Mr. Li and his wife, Guo Ping, 26, who was working at another Shenzhen 
factory when they met, live in an eighth-floor walk-up apartment off a 
noisy highway. Newspaper covers the windows. Their 3-year-old daughter 
lives in their Hubei-province hometown 700 miles north with her 
grandparents because they can’t afford a nanny or school fees in 
Shenzhen—one of 61 million offspring growing up in China without one or 
both parents, or 22% of the country’s children, estimates the 
government’s All-China Women’s Federation.

They phone her every few days “so she doesn’t forget us,” he says, but 
see her only once a year. “When I see parents in Shenzhen able to live 
with their children,” he says, “I feel sad and helpless.”

After the layoffs, Mr. Li and his wife stayed in Shenzhen to seek jobs 
while his brother Li Li, 32, with his sister-in-law and cousin returned 
to Hubei to see their children.

Yaoxing village, where the Li brothers grew up, is typical of rural 
China, given over to the old and young with few working-age residents. 
Their leaky earthen house without heat or running water is among a few 
dozen mostly empty dwellings in a landscape of rice fields and scrawny 
chickens.

Migrant workers Li Jiang, 30, and his wife Guo Ping, 26, look out over 
the Chinese manufacturing hub of Shenzhen with a view of one of three 
factories run by Fuchang Electronic Technology Co., where they worked 
until it suddenly halted production. ENLARGE
Migrant workers Li Jiang, 30, and his wife Guo Ping, 26, look out over 
the Chinese manufacturing hub of Shenzhen with a view of one of three 
factories run by Fuchang Electronic Technology Co., where they worked 
until it suddenly halted production. PHOTO: THEODORE KAYE FOR THE WALL 
STREET JOURNAL
Li Li talks of his options as he plays with his son Li Zihang, 6, and Li 
Jiang’s daughter, pigtailed Li Zixin. He feels he has outgrown his 
hometown but is unsure about job prospects in other cities. He’ll likely 
return to Shenzhen, he says.

But opportunities in industrial cities may be worsening. Zeng Xiangquan, 
director of the China Institute for Employment Research at Renmin 
University and a former Communist Party adviser, told a November forum 
that China faces a new wave of layoffs as companies restructure, 
according to the government’s Xinhua News Agency. Mr. Zeng declines to 
comment.

Factory closings create domino effects. Fuchang’s collapse forced 
supplier Jun Yi Co., which polishes cellphones, to lay off half its 
16-employee staff because of money Fuchang owes it, says Jun Yi owner 
Chen Jun.

“It’s incredibly stressful. Creditors call at all hours,” says Mr. Chen, 
no relation to Fuchang’s Mr. Chen, hanging up a creditor’s call. His 
wife worries he might commit suicide, he says tearfully. “It’s like a 
waterfall. Fuchang tumbles, then we fall.”

Mr. Liu, Fuchang’s lawyer, declines to give details on its debts.

Increasingly heated are labor disputes involving older, less-educated 
workers with limited job options, says Mr. Molloy, the crisis-management 
consultant. He advises clients—Western companies and a few Chinese 
multinationals—to lock factories, evacuate executives and ensure 
production can continue elsewhere before delivering bad news to workers.

“They’re increasingly desperate,” he says of older workers. “They’re not 
going to get another job.”

Labor backlash is meeting tough official responses. In the manufacturing 
hub of Guangdong province, strikes and worker protests over the past 
year have drawn more police and faster detentions, says Geoffrey 
Crothall, China Labour Bulletin’s communications director.

“Authorities now feel they have to up the ante as well,” he says. “In 
many cases, the cops outnumber the workers.” Workers estimate 200 police 
were involved in the Fuchang demonstrations. Shenzhen police declined to 
comment.

Mr. Li never expected to be at the center of a protest. By age 6, he was 
adept at the backbreaking rice-planting in the family’s small plots. 
Like most village youth, he left after high school, following a brother 
and a cousin to Shenzhen.

He worked at shoe and electronics factories, initially living in a 
12-bed dorm room with migrants who snored and ground their teeth. He 
joined Fuchang at the suggestion of his brother and cousin, who said it 
offered more overtime and better labor practices. He worked with molten 
plastic, which he says was bad for his health but worth it for a steady 
income.

His older brother, Li Li, says he had seen problems in the company’s 
storage department: Inventory was piling up, and suppliers seemed to 
have trouble getting paid. Still, Fuchang’s closure was a jolt.

Mr. Chen, the majority owner, in an October open letter to former 
workers and suppliers, expressed regret for being an overly cautious 
manager, which he said contributed to problems. “I can’t hide my shame,” 
he wrote, “at the company reaching this state.”

Mr. Li called and messaged colleagues, helping to build the protesters’ 
ranks. As they thronged outside the factory, he advised co-workers to 
keep moving to reduce the chance of arrest, something he had learned 
from online videos of other strikes.

“It’s about the only way we can get attention, short of jumping off a 
building,” says Zhang Zhiru, a labor activist who helped advise Fuchang 
workers. “When thousands of workers are outside their offices, the 
government is forced to notice.”

After initially saying it couldn’t pay workers, Fuchang offered 
severance based on three years’ work: about three months’ salary. The 
settlement enticed younger workers who were more employable, and it got 
workers off the streets. But it left older, more experienced workers 
isolated and having to negotiate on their own, say ex-workers and labor 
activists like Mr. Zhang.

Mr. Liu, Fuchang’s lawyer, says the company didn’t employ 
divide-and-conquer tactics and that the initial offer aimed to give 
workers some money promptly to cover immediate expenses: “No one has 
said there won’t be more compensation later.”

Mr. Li eventually found a job molding liquid plastic at another company. 
The work is more grinding than at Fuchang, he says, and he isn’t sure 
how long he will last. His wife and three other family members remain 
unemployed, so they need the money.

“We didn’t want to hit the streets. If they give us good benefits, we 
wouldn’t need to do this,” he says. “I’m doing this for our daughter. I 
hope she never has to work in a factory.”

—Pei Li contributed to this article.
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