full article http://www.nytimes.com/library/world/asia/083100china-econ.html

August 31, 200
Factory Closings in China Arouse Workers' Fury
By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL



 TIANJIN, China, Aug. 29 -- The brick-walled Meite Packaging factory
compound is nearly deserted now, its managers and machines hastily
transferred in the last couple of days to a special development zone 30
miles outside this industrial city.
Although the closing had long been planned, the sudden departure was
prompted by an unusual event here, Last week, desperate Chinese workers
expecting layoffs seized six foreign managers from Meite's American parent
company and held them hostage in the factory for 40 hours.

In the space of a decade, the Meite plant was transformed from a state-owned
company making pipes to a beverage packaging firm jointly owned by the
Chinese and an American corporation -- and, just recently, to a factory
wholly owned by the foreign partner, the Ball Corporation of Broomfield,
Colo.

And so this sweltering summer, middle-aged workers who not so many years ago
were promised cradle-to-grave security by the state factory found their
livelihoods suddenly threatened by a capitalist corporate restructuring and
felt they had no where to turn.

"Every day since the beginning of August they were there at the gate,
protesting and trying to block deliveries and people from going in," said
Liu Qiuling, a retiree who lives next to the factory and knows many who
worked there. "But the managers didn't meet with them. I think that's why
the workers were so mad."

Taking foreign businessmen hostage is rare in China, despite the thousands
of often fractious business partnerships between Chinese and foreign
companies. But the workers' frustrations that touched off the incident are
commonplace, leading to hundreds if not thousands of protests in recent
years.

Under government orders to become economically self-sufficient, many
formerly state-owned factories have tried to transform themselves, often
with the help of foreign partners.

The sink-or-swim strategy promoted by Prime Minister Zhu Rongji, who
oversees economic policy, has no doubt rescued thousands of companies from
bankruptcy and prepared them to compete in the global market. It has also
often enriched many former state factory officials, who are often offered
lucrative positions in the revamped business.

But it has been painful and confusing for China's tens of millions of
workers, echoing similar privatization efforts in the former Soviet bloc.
The workers are unfamiliar with the intricacies of buyouts and severance
packages, generally lack effective labor unions and have little outlet for
their complaints against new, often absentee, bosses.

"Workers' rights are not protected much when this happens," said Anita Chan,
a labor expert at Australian National University. "These are people who
worked for the state and thought they would work and then retire and enjoy
certain benefits: health care, pensions, things like that.

"But then one day it's just finished. And they are 40 and have many decades
of life ahead of them. What will they live on?"

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