Samsung and Panasonic Accused Over Supply Chain Labour Abuses in Malaysia (theguardian.com) 50
Samsung and Panasonic, two of the world's leading electronics brands, are facing allegations that workers in their supply chains are being duped, exploited and underpaid in Malaysia. From a report on The Guardian: The two companies have launched investigations into allegations of abuse made by Nepalese workers after a Guardian investigation raised multiple concerns about their treatment. The men said they had been deceived about pay, had their passports confiscated and had been told that they must pay large fines if they wanted to return to Nepal before the end of their contract. They also claimed they were forced to work for up to 14 hours on their feet without adequate rest, and with restricted toilet breaks, in an attempt to settle recruitment fees of up to pound 1,000 -- they said they had to pay this money to secure their jobs. They said they felt "cheated" and trapped in their factory jobs making or assembling components for household electrical goods sold on the global market. "My heart is aching," said one young man who works in a factory making Samsung microwaves. "I was not given the job I was promised. I am doing very difficult work. I haven't got the salary they said I would get."
Re:I have my doubts (Score:4, Insightful)
it's not on Samsung or Panasonic, but the supplier who hires the workers.
Samsung and Panasonic should be auditing their supply chains, including inspection of supplier factories. That is basic corporate ethics, and is a necessity in our modern interconnected world. That being said, we shouldn't jump to any conclusions: Many accusations like this in the past have turned out to be fabricated.
Coming here soon (Score:2)
But gig economy, and apps!
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Knowing something about the situation in Malaysia, I doubt the stories are fabricated, but I also doubt that a supply chain audit would have uncovered the issue, so I'm not sure Panasonic and Samsung really are to blame for the problem, though their pressure to correct the situation once it is uncovered will be valuable. Abuses of this type are rife in Malaysia, especially since the immigration dept clamped down on legal immigration for factory workers from Indonesia, Vietnam and other countries that former
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This is news? (Score:3, Insightful)
Samsung and Panasonic, two of the world's leading electronics brands, are facing allegations that workers in their supply chains are being duped, exploited and underpaid in Malaysia.
This is the *ONLY* reason you build a factory in Malaysia.
The crown has been passed... (Score:2)
As the crown passes from Microsoft to Apple and now to Samsung for biggest computer company, so does the number of "scandal stories". Can't make it to the top without a pile of bodies to climb upon.
This is the Dubai model... (Score:5, Informative)
Welcome to 21st century slavery.
http://www.vice.com/video/the-... [vice.com]
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I never understood how this could work given that there are no slave masters standing their with whips and guns like in the old days. What keeps these people from lynching their managers right on the factory floor?
That would be the men with truncheons, tasers, and guns.
Re:This is the Dubai model... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Your description sounds a lot like the H-1B program, except H-1B workers get paid a little more.
In both cases, if you don't like your job, you're kind of screwed. Knowing that gives employers all the more incentive to exploit their workers.
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you go to the embassy to get a replacement.. not a big deal?
Well, you still have to get to your embassy or consulate. Oh, wait, that's in a city the other side of the country, a nice long trip. You have to travel to that office. If you can get past the armed guards whose primary job is not to let you leave the compound. And replacements cost money. Money that is being withheld from you until you pay certain job "fees" that just never seem to get paid. And you need to show proof of citizenship. Fun thing when you only have the clothes on your back.
Yea, not a big deal
Wait, I thought only Apple was ever guily of this? (Score:2)
Seriously though .... I'm not especially well versed in the details of Malaysian government, but it seems they're a Constitutional Monarchy.
As an American citizen, I've never felt that comfortable with a monarchy or any kind of dictatorship securing the rights and freedoms of individuals. At best, a "benevolent dictatorship" is just a temporarily condition, happened upon by the citizens as "pure luck". A monarchy where the appointed king or queen follows a constitution is better, assuming a well written co
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The political science isn't.
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not free markets by any stretch (Score:2)
Before anyone rants about how this is an example of how free markets stink, let us be reminded that a key ingredient to free markets, whether they are the sales of the good or the hiring of the labor, is accurate information. Neither the laborers selling their labor nor the customers making the final purchases were much aware of what was going on here until it was too late. In a free (labor) market these people wouldn't be conned into slavery working there in the first place
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Actually markets only work on the basis of opaqueness of information.
Maybe the opaqueness of some information is permissible, but free market definitely requires a lot of transparent information. Perfect competition [wikipedia.org] requires perfect information [wikipedia.org]. So this is actually an example of market failure.
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Fucking rubbish. I would say you're a DeVry grad, but maybe you're a professor at Trump-U.
If I'm away in some city I don't really give a fuck what a hotel's margins are - the decision weighs on whether I think it's worth paying the rate rather than sleeping in my car or under a bridge.
Wow (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm genuinely disappointed.
I've seen numerous internet articles [cnet.com] showing the wide array and quality [fortune.com] of Samsung campuses in South Korea, and I've always told my friends and coworkers to buy Samsung, because you're buying Korean, and you're voting for a company with a good track record of clean production facilities and high wages for workers.
I guess Samsung is just as bad as Apple [theguardian.com]. Or Nike [wsj.com]. Or that company that built the Burj Khalifa [migrant-rights.org]. I wonder who built it...
Wikipedia.org...Burj Khalifa...
Oh, wait... [wikipedia.org]
Well, that just ruined my day.
Trump! (Score:2)
We need to do something about trade where works rights are not in place.
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We should do something about it - when it happens somewhere else. There, it's unfair competition and they're literally raping our lunch. Here, it's the free market gig economy and if you don't like it yurracormanust.
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We need to do something about trade where works rights are not in place.
Like Walmart?
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Exploding batteries? (Score:1)
Could this be related?
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Yes, little notes asking for help were being concealed in the phones, which also caused the phones to catch fire and then explode..
Who cares? (Score:2)
If it makes our goods cheaper, who cares what they do? Most people seem to agree that cheap goods should be the #1 concern. If slaves can make thing cheaper, the pain they feel isn't as bad as the savings everyone else gets. On average, we are all better off. /s