NOVEMBER 27, 2006 / BusinessWeek

COVER STORY

Secrets, Lies, And Sweatshops
American importers have long answered criticism of conditions at their
Chinese suppliers with labor rules and inspections. But many factories
have just gotten better at concealing abuses

Tang Yinghong was caught in an impossible squeeze. For years, his
employer, Ningbo Beifa Group, had prospered as a top supplier of pens,
mechanical pencils, and highlighters to Wal-Mart Stores (WMT ) and
other major retailers. But late last year, Tang learned that auditors
from Wal-Mart, Beifa's biggest customer, were about to inspect labor
conditions at the factory in the Chinese coastal city of Ningbo where
he worked as an administrator. Wal-Mart had already on three occasions
caught Beifa paying its 3,000 workers less than China's minimum wage
and violating overtime rules, Tang says. Under the U.S. chain's labor
rules, a fourth offense would end the relationship.

Help arrived suddenly in the form of an unexpected phone call from a
man calling himself Lai Mingwei. The caller said he was with Shanghai
Corporate Responsibility Management & Consulting Co., and for a $5,000
fee, he'd take care of Tang's Wal-Mart problem. "He promised us he
could definitely get us a pass for the audit," Tang says.

Lai provided advice on how to create fake but authentic-looking
records and suggested that Beifa hustle any workers with grievances
out of the factory on the day of the audit, Tang recounts. The
consultant also coached Beifa managers on what questions they could
expect from Wal-Mart's inspectors, says Tang. After following much of
Lai's advice, the Beifa factory in Ningbo passed the audit earlier
this year, Tang says, even though the company didn't change any of its
practices.

For more than a decade, major American retailers and name brands have
answered accusations that they exploit "sweatshop" labor with
elaborate codes of conduct and on-site monitoring. But in China many
factories have just gotten better at concealing abuses. Internal
industry documents reviewed by BusinessWeek reveal that numerous
Chinese factories keep double sets of books to fool auditors and
distribute scripts for employees to recite if they are questioned. And
a new breed of Chinese consultant has sprung up to assist companies
like Beifa in evading audits. "Tutoring and helping factories deal
with audits has become an industry in China," says Tang, 34, who
recently left Beifa of his own volition to start a Web site for
workers.

A lawyer for Beifa, Zhou Jie, confirms that the company employed the
Shanghai consulting firm but denies any dishonesty related to wages,
hours, or outside monitoring. Past audits had "disclosed some
problems, and we took necessary measures correspondingly," he explains
in a letter responding to questions. The lawyer adds that Beifa has
"become the target of accusations" by former employees "whose
unreasonable demands have not been satisfied." Reached by cell phone,
a man identifying himself as Lai says that the Shanghai consulting
firm helps suppliers pass audits, but he declines to comment on his
work for Beifa.

Wal-Mart spokeswoman Amy Wyatt says the giant retailer will
investigate the allegations about Beifa brought to its attention by
BusinessWeek. Wal-Mart has stepped up factory inspections, she adds,
but it acknowledges that some suppliers are trying to undermine
monitoring: "We recognize there is a problem. There are always
improvements that need to be made, but we are confident that new
procedures are improving conditions."

CHINESE EXPORT manufacturing is rife with tales of deception. The
largest single source of American imports, China's factories this year
are expected to ship goods to the U.S. worth $280 billion. American
companies continually demand lower prices from their Chinese
suppliers, allowing American consumers to enjoy inexpensive clothes,
sneakers, and electronics. But factory managers in China complain in
interviews that U.S. price pressure creates a powerful incentive to
cheat on labor standards that American companies promote as a badge of
responsible capitalism. These standards generally incorporate the
official minimum wage, which is set by local or provincial governments
and ranges from $45 to $101 a month. American companies also typically
say they hew to the government-mandated workweek of 40 to 44 hours,
beyond which higher overtime pay is required. These figures can be
misleading, however, as the Beijing government has had only limited
success in pushing local authorities to enforce Chinese labor laws.
That's another reason abuses persist and factory oversight frequently
fails.

Some American companies now concede that the cheating is far more
pervasive than they had imagined. "We've come to realize that, while
monitoring is crucial to measuring the performance of our suppliers,
it doesn't per se lead to sustainable improvements," says Hannah
Jones, Nike Inc.'s (NKE ) vice-president for corporate responsibility.
"We still have the same core problems."

This raises disturbing questions. Guarantees by multi-nationals that
offshore suppliers are meeting widely accepted codes of conduct have
been important to maintaining political support in the U.S. for
growing trade ties with China, especially in the wake of protests by
unions and antiglobalization activists. "For many retailers, audits
are a way of covering themselves," says Auret van Heerden, chief
executive of the Fair Labor Assn., a coalition of 20 apparel and
sporting goods makers and retailers, including Nike, Adidas Group,
Eddie Bauer, and Nordstrom (JWN ). But can corporations successfully
impose Western labor standards on a nation that lacks real unions and
a meaningful rule of law?

Historically associated with sweatshop abuses but now trying to reform
its suppliers, Nike says that one factory it caught falsifying records
several years ago is the Zhi Qiao Garments Co. The dingy
concrete-walled facility set near mango groves and rice paddies in the
steamy southern city of Panyu employs 600 workers, most in their early
20s. They wear blue smocks and lean over stitching machines and large
steam-blasting irons. Today the factory complies with labor-law
requirements, Nike says, but Zhi Qiao's general manager, Peter Wang,
says it's not easy. "Before, we all played the cat-and-mouse game,"
but that has ended, he claims. "Any improvement you make costs more
money." Providing for overtime wages is his biggest challenge, he
says. By law, he is supposed to provide time-and-a-half pay after
eight hours on weekdays and between double and triple pay for
Saturdays, Sundays, and holidays. "The price [Nike pays] never
increases one penny," Wang complains, "but compliance with labor codes
definitely raises costs."

A Nike spokesman says in a written statement that the company, based
in Beaverton, Ore., "believes wages are best set by the local
marketplace in which a contract factory competes for its workforce."
One way Nike and several other companies are seeking to improve labor
conditions is teaching their suppliers more efficient production
methods that reduce the need for overtime.

The problems in China aren't limited to garment factories, where labor
activists have documented sweatshop conditions since the early 1990s.
Widespread violations of Chinese labor laws are also surfacing in
factories supplying everything from furniture and household appliances
to electronics and computers. Hewlett-Packard, (HPQ ) Dell (DELL ),
and other companies that rely heavily on contractors in China to
supply notebook PCs, digital cameras, and handheld devices have formed
an industry alliance to combat the abuses.

A compliance manager for a major multinational company who has
overseen many factory audits says that the percentage of Chinese
suppliers caught submitting false payroll records has risen from 46%
to 75% in the past four years. This manager, who requested anonymity,
estimates that only 20% of Chinese suppliers comply with wage rules,
while just 5% obey hour limitations.

A RECENT VISIT by the compliance manager to a toy manufacturer in
Shenzhen illustrated the crude ways that some suppliers conceal
mistreatment. The manager recalls smelling strong paint fumes in the
poorly ventilated and aging factory building. Young women employees
were hunched over die-injection molds, using spray guns to paint
storybook figurines. The compliance manager discovered a second
workshop behind a locked door that a factory official initially
refused to open but eventually did. In the back room, a young woman,
who appeared to be under the legal working age of 16, tried to hide
behind her co-workers on the production line, the visiting compliance
manager says. The Chinese factory official admitted he was violating
various work rules.

The situation in China is hard to keep in perspective. For all the
shortcomings in factory conditions and oversight, even some critics
say that workers' circumstances are improving overall. However
compromised, pressure from multinationals has curbed some of the most
egregious abuses by outside suppliers. Factories owned directly by
such corporations as Motorola Inc (MOT ). and General Electric Co. (GE
) generally haven't been accused of mistreating their employees. And a
booming economy and tightening labor supply in China have emboldened
workers in some areas to demand better wages, frequently with success.
Even so, many Chinese laborers, especially migrants from poor rural
regions, still seek to work as many hours as possible, regardless of
whether they are properly paid.

In this shifting, often murky environment, labor auditing has
mushroomed into a multimillion-dollar industry. Internal corporate
investigators and such global auditing agencies as Cal Safety
Compliance, sgs of Switzerland, and Bureau Veritas of France operate a
convoluted and uncoordinated oversight system. They follow varying
corporate codes of conduct, resulting in some big Chinese factories
having to post seven or eight different sets of rules. Some factories
receive almost daily visits from inspection teams demanding payroll
and production records, facility tours, and interviews with managers
and workers. "McDonald's (MCD ), Walt Disney, (DIS ) and Wal-Mart are
doing thousands of audits a year that are not harmonized," says van
Heerden of Fair Labor. Among factory managers, "audit fatigue sets
in," he says.

Some companies that thought they were making dramatic progress are
discovering otherwise. A study commissioned by Nike last year covered
569 factories it uses in China and around the world that employ more
than 300,000 workers. It found labor-code violations in every single
one. Some factories "hide their work practices by maintaining two or
even three sets of books," by coaching workers to "mislead auditors
about their work hours, and by sending portions of production to
unauthorized contractors where we have no oversight," the Nike study
found.

THE FAIR LABOR ASSN. released its own study last November based on
unannounced audits of 88 of its members' supplier factories in 18
countries. It found an average of 18 violations per factory, including
excessive hours, underpayment of wages, health and safety problems,
and worker harassment. The actual violation rate is probably higher,
the fla said, because "factory personnel have become sophisticated in
concealing noncompliance related to wages. They often hide original
documents and show monitors falsified books."

While recently auditing an apparel manufacturer in Dongguan that
supplies American importers, the corporate compliance manager says he
discussed wage levels with the factory's Hong Kong-based owner. The
2,000 employees who operate sewing and stitching machines in the
multi-story complex often put in overtime but earn an average of only
$125 a month, an amount the owner grudgingly acknowledged to the
compliance manager doesn't meet Chinese overtime-pay requirements or
corporate labor codes. "These goals are a fantasy," the owner said.
"Maybe in two or three decades we can meet them."

Pinning down what Chinese production workers are paid can be tricky.
Based on Chinese government figures, the average manufacturing wage in
China is 64 cents an hour, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics and demographer Judith Banister of Javelin Investments, a
consulting firm in Beijing. That rate assumes a 40-hour week. In fact,
60- to 100-hour weeks are common in China, meaning that the real
manufacturing wage is far less. Based on his own calculations from
plant inspections, the veteran compliance manager estimates that
employees at garment, electronics, and other export factories
typically work more than 80 hours a week and make only 42 cents an
hour.

BusinessWeek reviewed summaries of 28 recent industry audits of
Chinese factories serving U.S. customers. A few factories supplying
Black & Decker, (BDK ) Williams-Sonoma, and other well-known brands
turned up clean, the summaries show. But these facilities were the
exceptions.

At most of the factories, auditors discovered records apparently meant
to falsify payrolls and time sheets. One typical report concerns
Zhongshan Tat Shing Toys Factory, which employs 650 people in the
southern city of Zhongshan. The factory's main customers are Wal-Mart
and Target. (TGT ) When an American-sponsored inspection team showed
up this spring, factory managers produced time sheets showing each
worker put in eight hours a day, Monday through Friday, and was paid
double the local minimum wage of 43 cents per hour for eight hours on
Saturday, according to an audit report.

But when auditors interviewed workers in one section, some said that
they were paid less than the minimum wage and that most of them were
obliged to work an extra three to five hours a day, without overtime
pay, the report shows. Most toiled an entire month without a day off.
Workers told auditors that the factory had a different set of records
showing actual overtime hours, the report says. Factory officials
claimed that some of the papers had been destroyed by fire.

Wal-Mart's Wyatt doesn't dispute the discrepancies but stresses that
the company is getting more aggressive overall in its monitoring.
Wal-Mart says it does more audits than any other company--13,600
reviews of 7,200 factories last year alone--and permanently banned 141
factories in 2005 as a result of serious infractions, such as using
child labor. In a written statement, Target doesn't respond to the
allegations but says that it "takes very seriously" the fair treatment
of factory workers. It adds that it "is committed to taking corrective
action--up to and including termination of the relationship for
vendors" that violate local labor law or Target's code of conduct. The
Zhongshan factory didn't respond to repeated requests for comment.

An audit late last year of Young Sun Lighting Co., a maker of lamps
for Home Depot, (HD ) Sears (SHLD ), and other retailers, highlighted
similar inconsistencies. Every employee was on the job five days a
week from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., with a lunch break and no overtime
hours, according to interviews with managers, as well as time sheets
and payroll records provided by the 300-worker factory in Dongguan, an
industrial city in Guangdong Province. But other records auditors
found at the site and elsewhere--backed up by auditor interviews with
workers--revealed that laborers worked an extra three to five hours a
day with only one or two days a month off during peak production
periods. Workers said they received overtime pay, but the "auditor
strongly felt that these workers were coached," the audit report
states.

Young Sun denies ever violating the rules set by its Western
customers. In written answers to questions, the lighting manufacturer
says that it doesn't coach employees on how to respond to auditors and
that "at present, there are no" workers who are putting in three to
five extra hours a day and getting only one or two days off each
month. Young Sun says that it follows all local Chinese overtime
rules.

Home Depot doesn't contest the inconsistencies in the audit reports
about Young Sun and three other factories in China. "There is no
perfect factory, I can guarantee you," a company spokeswoman says.
Instead of cutting off wayward suppliers, Home Depot says that it
works with factories on corrective actions. If the retailer becomes
aware of severe offenses, such as the use of child labor, it
terminates the supplier. A Sears spokesman declined to comment.

Coaching of workers and midlevel managers to mislead auditors is
widespread, the auditing reports and BusinessWeek interviews show. A
document obtained last year during an inspection at one Chinese fabric
export factory in the southern city of Guangzhou instructed
administrators to take these actions when faced with a surprise audit:
"First notify underage trainees, underage full-time workers, and
workers without identification to leave the manufacturing workshop
through the back door. Order them not to loiter near the dormitory
area. Secondly, immediately order the receptionist to gather all
relevant documents and papers." Other pointers include instructing all
workers to put on necessary protective equipment such as earplugs and
face masks.

SOME U.S. RETAILERS SAY this evidence isn't representative and that
their auditing efforts are working. BusinessWeek asked J.C. Penney Co.
(JCP ) about audit reports included among those the magazine reviewed
that appear to show falsification of records to hide overtime and pay
violations at two factories serving the large retailer. Penney
spokeswoman Darcie M. Brossart says the company immediately
investigated the factories, and its "auditors observed no evidence of
any legal compliance issues."

In any case, the two factories are too small to be seen as typical,
Penney executives argue. The chain has been consolidating its China
supply base and says that 80% of its imports now come from factories
with several thousand workers apiece, which are managed by large Hong
Kong trading companies that employ their own auditors. Quality
inspectors for Penney and other buyers are at their supplier sites
constantly, so overtime violations are hard to hide, Brossart says.

Chinese factory officials say, however, that just because infractions
are difficult to discern doesn't mean they're not occurring. "It's a
challenge for us to meet these codes of conduct," says Ron Chang, the
Taiwanese general manager of Nike supplier Shoetown Footwear Co.,
which employs 15,000 workers in Qingyuan, Guangdong. Given the fierce
competition in China for foreign production work, "we can't ask Nike
to increase our price," he says, so "how can we afford to pay the
higher salary?" By reducing profit margins from 30% to 5% over the
past 18 years, Shoetown has managed to stay in business and obey
Nike's rules, he says.

But squeezing margins doesn't solve the larger social issue. Chang
says he regularly loses skilled employees to rival factories that
break the rules because many workers are eager to put in longer hours
than he offers, regardless of whether they get paid overtime rates.
Ultimately, the economics of global outsourcing may trump any system
of oversight that Western companies attempt. And these harsh economic
realities could make it exceedingly difficult to achieve both the low
prices and the humane working conditions that U.S. consumers have been
promised.

http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/06_48/b4011001.htm?campaign_id=nws_insdr_nov18&link_position=link1

By Dexter Roberts & Pete Engardio, with Aaron Bernstein in Washington,
Stanley Holmes in Seattle, and Xiang Ji in Beijing

--
Jim Devine / "That's free enterprise, friends: freedom to gamble,
freedom to lose. And the great thing -- the truly democratic thing
about it -- is that you don't even have to be a player to lose." --
Barbara Ehrenreich.

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