Imagine a young couple in China shopping for some cheap tech that won’t break the bank. They finally find an off-brand TV in their price range, they flip it over and it says, “Made in USA.” Of course, the only way to get something affordable is to import it from the states.
Sounds like some sort of silly joke a distant uncle might tell at Thanksgivin,g but reports from DigiTimes suggest that it won’t be long until America is a source of cheap labor for Chinese manufacturers. On the forefront of eyeballing the American workforce is Foxconn Electronics (Hon Hai Precision Industry), the makers of all iTech like iPads and iPhones.
Americans wouldn’t be producing Apple products, however, because it is a rather complicated procedure. The plants Foxconn is considering opening in the U.S. would focus on LCD TVs, which are considerably simpler to manufacture and automated easier. Eric Stavitz, tech and finance writer for Forbes, commented, “Nice to think they will be hiring here…but [it's] still a fascinating insult to U.S. manufacturing prowess, dontcha think – the idea that actually making Apple products is a little too complicated for Americans to handle…”
Maybe it is a glimmer of hope that American labor still pulls in a few extra dollars compared to the international competition,h or maybe not. CNET reported that Foxconn was meeting with Sharp earlier this year to acquire two of that company's assembly plants in Mexico and China. The assembly plants are designed to produce LCD televisions. If market watchers are correct, Foxconn will be opening more plants in cities like Detroit and Los Angeles.
Foxconn chairman Terry Guo announced plans to begin teaming with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to develop a training program for U.S.-based engineers. They will bring engineers to Taiwan and China to get first-hand experience in the company’s manufacturing and production process. Immersed in the environment, the engineers will be learning the Chinese language as well as tips to take back to the states and implement into the process here.
While job creation in general sounds like a good thing, there are some people that would consider accepting work from Foxconn a dance with the devil. Not popular in recent news, the company has been under investigation for its labor practice including excessive overtime, coerced labor and breaches in child labor laws. Earlier this year, nearly 150 workers threatened mass suicide by jumping off the building because of the conditions in which they were working. Previous years have seen such high suicide rates in their staff that Foxconn has installed safety nets from buildings to prevent attempts from becoming successful.
In hard-hit places like Michigan, there are many workers willing to do just about anything to get a job. A big computer manufacturing company like Foxconn could be just what the community needs to get out of economic ruin. However, civil leaders need to be very clear about how labor standards should be met before letting such companies move into town.
Image courtesy of njaj at FreeDigitalPhotos.
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