Foxconn International Removed From Hang Seng Index
Tasha26 writes "After the suicides and fatal explosion, the Taiwanese company Foxconn now faces losing its blue-chip status. Falling prices for smartphones, laptops, tablets and other gadgets and rising wages in China have undermined Foxconn's financial performance. The company lost $220m (£135m) in 2010. Foxconn International will be removed from Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng index and be replaced by insurer AIA and nappy maker Hengan. The two new entrants use China both as a source of cheap labour and as a market for their product, a switch which Foxconn is now considering."
hahaha
The two new entrants use China both as a source of cheap labour and as a market for their product
They sound like fine, upstanding companies! Oh wait... So basically they just replaced one exploitative company with two more!
No more iPads.
Guess they better learn to control inflation. The way America did.
Deleted
What the hell is a nappy? I'll ask Don Imus!
http://www.stopacop.so -- You have rights. How about standing up for them before they go away?
Foxconn is investing $12bn in Brazil. Citing the rising labor costs in China for this expansion.
the canucks have a overhyped shit goalie that very lucky to get past round 1.
I wonder if it'll ever happen where companies abduct the starving, diseased children in Africa or India (again), drop them in a hidden or secured and un-visitable facility (E.g. no press), and farm their own population of slaves to 'solve the problem of world hunger' and still make a disgusting amount of profit off of the end-buyer.
it's certainly better than other options for the poor in china
i always want to ask people who complain about the exploitation of factory workers in poor countries: what's your alternative? go back to the farm and starve?
factories in poor countries are exploitation RELATIVE to standards in the west. but RELATIVE to where these workers are coming from, conditions are BETTER
here, from us history:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Triangle_Shirtwaist_Factory_fire
this is basically china, today
what came of horrible industrial conditions 100 years ago in the usa? workers agitated for the labor laws we now enjoy in the usa (republican attempts to turn the usa back into a poor country with no worker standards notwithstanding)
what are chinese workers now doing?
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/international/countriesandterritories/china/labor-issues/index.html
they are asserting their rights, they are agitating for labor laws
this is the way of PROGRESS: you don't move from squalid poor slum to the best conditions in the rich west by snapping your fingers. you climb there, you STRUGGLE. there is no other way
and china is certainly leveraging its industrial might to be as rich as the west, to dominate the west, in a decade or so. it's not exploitation, i'm sorry. it's called progress. chinese workers are busting their ass so their children live by western standards. and that's commendable of them. and some whiny westerner complaining about exploitation is certainly of no use or help to them
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Check to see if your Company name is available http://bit.ly/m2IHF4
Is way off base.
Foxconn makes products under contract. Many many of the products they make are sold into China.
They do make few products under their own name plates which is maybe why the reporter is confused?
Also I think the reporter may be confused about what the company actually is. Hon Hai Precision is Foxconn.
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
Foxconn will still make money, they'll still treat their workers poorly, and we'll still keep buying their products.
Foxconn has their hands in EVERYTHING. From sockets to full products under contract with other companies. They do it all when it comes to semiconductors.
They would already be doing it (and perhaps they *are* and we just don't know). Since China tends to favor the Chinese, I think they would abduct populations and turn them into "Soylent Green" to feed their own population first.
Secondly, there's ALREADY a cheap supply of labor right next door to them, it's called North Korea. The only problem is that NK has zero infrastructure. I think they are waiting for the current regime to die, and then they will waltz in and take over. And it will actually be a good thing for the citizens, as the Chinese might build the infrastructure needed. In which case NK citizens might get things like running water and electricity.
We've seen in WWII that the Germans used slave labor in underground facilities, I'm sure the Chinese are aware of this and could probably pull it off, if it weren't for all that pesky satellite monitoring.
If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
Didn't we cover here the story that Foxconn's suicide rate was well below population averages in China? Do the other Chinese 'blue-chip' companies have even lower suicide rates?
My God, it's Full of Source!
OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
I'm sure that the chinese government backed goons doing the break-ins could have bribed/intimidated the guards enough to let them in anyway, and probably help cover their tracks somewhat
the CEO and top executives get the bucks today, and they get golden parachutes tomorrow. it is not really any of their problem if the entire company goes down the toilet.
it is very much what happened in the financial crisis - CEOs like Dick Fuld of Lehman brothers walked away with hundreds of millions of dollars. He lost a lot of money personally, but he is not wondering where his next meal will come from.
There are thousands if not tens of thousands of lower level executives, hedge fund people, etc, who did the same thing. Ramp up the CDO business, get rich quick, retire, and let the rest of society fend for itself.
they have one of the worst safety records in the history of coal mining, and if you talk about it you get put in a labor camp
hell, they just imprisoned a guy who ran a website about the poisoned baby-milk scandal. Zhao Lianhai.
That's sideways to and edgewise intersection on a downslope- reflected inside by the mirrors in the workers' locker room - at the very least. Maybe the phones on the assembly line are casting reflections due west? Someone really let this one go by, there. No doubt about it! :)