
Dying Young:
Suicide & China’s booming economy
25 May 2010

A newly-installed safety net between dormitory buildings to prevent employees from attempting suicide by jumping off the rooftop—can it really help save lives?
[photo by Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM)]
Introduction
Since the beginning of 2010, a startling ten Foxconn employees in Shenzhen tried to end their lives. Eight died, while two survived their injuries. All were between 18 and 25 years old—in the prime of their youth—and their loss should awaken wider society to reflect upon the costs of a development model that sacrifices dignity for economic growth.
On 18 May 2010, nine mainland Chinese and
From the moment they [the new generation of migrant workers] step beyond the doors of their houses, they never think of going back to farming like their parents. In this sense, they see no other options when they enter the city to work. The moment they see there is little possibility of building a home in the city through hard work, the very meaning of their work collapses. The path ahead is blocked, and the road to retreat is closed. Trapped in this situation, the new generation of migrant workers faces a serious identity crisis and, in effect, this magnifies psychological and emotional problems. Digging into this deeper level of our societal and structural conditions, we come closer to understanding the ‘no way back’ mentality of these Foxconn employees.
Chinese migrants as low-paid workers and secondary citizens
More than 10 percent of the 1.4 billion people in
In comparison with global-oriented export processing zones, the vast Chinese countryside is viewed as a wasteland of backwardness. The decollectivization of agricultural production differentiated the rural economy and spurred rising income differences between households. Young people long for a life attuned to the times, and the city is where everything happens. Aspirations for a better future have motivated many from the countryside to seek new opportunities in the cities. The resulting rural-to-urban migration left villages associated with stagnation.
Under the direction of the Chinese authoritarian state,
The rural experience of these new workers is oftentimes irrelevant or even considered a detriment to the manufacturing process. Migrants must liquidate their past and become a blank slate receptive to training. To quicken the transformation, employers draw attention to migrants’ deficiencies and missing skills. Furthermore, with hundreds of millions competing for jobs, migrants feel a perpetual sense of anxiety, continuously reminded of their replacability.
Workers-of-rural-origins are discriminated culturally and materially. Their younger cohorts in particular find themselves insecure, neither belonging to the city nor feeling able to return to a livelihood in the countryside. Some have their employment histories brought to an end from work injuries. Still some others, under desperate conditions, have taken their own lives. The priority given to economic development in
Riding Foxconn’s “suicide express”?
Amid media reports of suicides of young Chinese workers, public discussions about corporate management, workers’ socio-psychological well-being, and international supply chain labor responsibility have been getting intense.
An online Chinese news database newly created in January 2010 raised a question, “Foxconn employees—why haven’t they held back from killing themselves (Ppsj.com)?” Another report dated
Foxconn Technology Group, a Fortune 500 company, is the largest final assembling-supplier in the global electronics industry. The Taiwanese company announced consolidated net profits of NT$18 billion (US$568.73 million) for the first quarter of 2010, increased 34.8 percent on year. The company employs over 800,000 staff worldwide, mostly in
A snapshot of Foxconn’s death toll:
Hanging in her dormitory toilet?
Hou, a 19-year-old
Hou’s parents were shocked upon hearing the tragic news. Two weeks before Hou’s death, she had phoned them to share her plan to quit soon after receiving her wages (New China Net, 27 June 2007).
Dying from overwork?
Liu Bing, 21-year-old, died two hours after resigning from Foxconn. He left because the work was “too noisy and unbearably exhaustive.” His job responsibility was loading and unloading heavy goods. Overwork is the suspected cause of his death (Southern Metropolis Daily, 6 September 2007).
Unbearable work pressure?
Feng, a 23-year-old university graduate, jumped from a 14th floor building to his death. The police found a suicide note in his dormitory, “Too much work pressure; unstable emotions.” Foxconn responded that Feng’s death might be related to a bonus reduction in connection with work productivity (Southern Metropolis Daily, 17 January 2009).
Unmanageable consequence as a result of “Apple leak”?
Sun Danyong, a 25-year-old
Foxconn issued a statement: “Regardless of the reason of Sun’s suicide, it is to some extent a reflection of Foxconn’s internal management deficiencies, especially in how to help young workers cope with the psychological pressures of working life at the company” (Li Jinming, Foxconn’s General Manager, quoted in Southern Metropolis Daily,
The “psychological pressures” referred to included being suspected of stealing, interrogation and solitary confinement by security officers, and having his home searched. He was allegedly beaten and humiliated. His final online chat with his friends revealed both his agony and relief, “Thinking that I won’t be bullied tomorrow, won’t have to be the scapegoat, I feel much better (Southern Metropolis Daily, 21 July 2009).”
Apple, one of the direct buyers of Foxconn products, released a press statement: “We are saddened by the tragic loss of this young employee, and we are awaiting results of the investigations into his death. We require that our suppliers treat all workers with dignity and respect (quoted in CNET News,
Commentators suggested that Apple’s secretive culture and business approach—creating and suspending great surprise in the market and thereby adding sale value to its products—have sent extreme pressure all the way down its Chinese suppliers.
Fell to his death but why?
Ma Xiangqian, a 19-year-old Henan-native, entered Foxconn in November 2009, was found dead lying near the stairway of a factory dormitory on
Ma’s two sisters insisted that their brother was beaten to death at work because “there were scars on his dead body—he was black and blue in the chest area, had blood in his mouth and nose, and a big wound in his forehead” (Guangzhou Daily,
Foxconn refuted local media’s reports that Ma had been assigned to cleaning toilets after he damaged equipment (due to his inexperience).
Financial stress?
Li, in his early 20s, jumped from a 5th floor dormitory after his Chinese New Year wages were stolen.
Attempting suicide
Tian Yu was rescued after she jumped from her dormitory. Journalists have been trying to contact her but no further details were disclosed.
Attempted suicide
Liu Zhijun, a 23-year-old
“Too much work pressure,” testified a female worker survivor
Rao Leqin, an 18-year-old
Reports first alleged that Rao was troubled by a romantic relationship. When interviewed at the hospital, she clarified that she was “under work pressure.” She added that she did not have boyfriend.
Foxconn extended a typical work day to 12 hours. Rao said, “Morning assembly starts from
Rao believed that it was difficult for her to resign without losing her wages. “At that time [when she attempted suicide], I had only 15 yuan left. Earlier, I borrowed 50 yuan from my co-worker. I was running into deep [financial] problems,” she said (New China Net, 26 April 2010).
Attempted suicide
Ning, an 18-year-old
6 May 2010
Psychiatric breakdown?
Lu Xin, a 24-year-old
Lu allegedly suffered from a psychiatric disorder. According to his friends, Lu showed symptoms of delusions like “being followed and threatened [by someone who wants to kill him].” He was on the verge of personal breakdown around the May Day Holiday (on the 1st May International Labor Day, 2010).
Commentators suggested that Lu’s mental problems were triggered and related to work pressure (Southern Metropolis Daily,
Foxconn brought in monks in an attempt to release the souls of the deceased employees from suffering and to dispel misfortune (Southern Metropolis Daily, 12 May 2010). The conduction of the religious rite, however, could not stop Zhu Chenming (a 24-year-old
Dying young: personal or workplace problems?
Foxconn spokesperson Edmund Ding, in response to the public outcry of “nine consecutive jumps” between January and mid-May 2010, told the media that some of the workers had had “personal problems” (
We question Foxconn’s framing of the suicides as isolated, individual cases. The corporate prescriptions on comforting and caring the needy employees have left key workplace-based social problems unattended.
First, despite the high status as
Second, the shop floor environment at Foxconn is tense and atomized. Each frontline production worker specializes in one specific task and performs monotonous, repetitive motions. The work is intense and work pace quick. Between April and early May 2010, a journalist conducted an undercover investigation by working in the Foxconn Longhua plant in Shenzhen for 28 days. He found: “Workers are feeling exhausted to the extent that they envy their injured co-workers. Why? They can take some rest from work as they are recovering (Southern Weekly,
Third, migrant workers feel that they generally lack affective and social support. There is no exception at Foxconn. Senior management admits that the turnover of lower-level workers is fairly high (Global Times, 13 May 2010). While some workers get to know their dormitory roommates quite well, others find them complete strangers. A few choose to rent small apartments with friends and relatives outside the factory as far as they can afford them. In their everyday life, they encounter numerous difficulties to access to basic community services because they are not recognized as urban residents. Under the decades-old household registration system, migrants are classified as “floaters,” whose permanent residency is in the countryside. They are marginalized workers within and beyond the “
Foxconn is one of the members of the Electronic Industry Citizenship Coalition (EICC)[4] that pledges itself to uphold high labor and social standards in the global electronics supply chain. The company leaders need to work concretely with the local governments and the civil society organizations to implement both the labor law and the industry-level code of conduct.
At the time of writing—as of 21 May 2010—unfortunately, the 10th Foxconn employee jumped to his death just before 5:
Corporations and governments must act responsibly now
Concerned labor group, China Labor Watch, called for an overhaul of conditions for Foxconn’s production line workers, after an investigation prompted by the suicide cluster (China Labor Watch, 18 May 2010).[5] On 25 May 2010, Hong Kong-based Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM) protested at Foxconn’s
The Foxconn suicides have received much media attention and yet many other Chinese workers toil under terrible conditions. It is common knowledge that workplace accidents and even deaths are routinely covered up.[7] Image-conscious global buyers and their suppliers sometimes show some concern for workers’ treatment. But often, this seems only business-as-usual done in the currency of the rhetoric of corporate social responsibility.
President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have emphasized social stability and harmony in addition to achieving national economic objectives. A more balanced urban-rural development and people-centered policy is indeed much needed.
We are concerned about the increasingly fragmented, precariously employed new working class. In the dominant discourse of development, human sacrifices have been considered inevitable if not outright necessary. Without stronger protections for Chinese migrant workers’ rights to unionize and strive for decent work, it seems almost certain we will witness a growing list of deaths.
Cited news sources on Foxconn suicides in chronological order:
New
http://news.xinhuanet.com/society/2007-06/27/content_6297739.htm
Southern Metropolis Daily (Nanfang Dushi Bao),
http://news.sohu.com/20070906/n251989717.shtml
Southern Metropolis Daily (Nanfang Dushi Bao),
http://epaper.nddaily.com/H/html/2009-01/17/content_688488.htm
Southern Metropolis Daily (Nanfang Dushi Bao),
http://gcontent.nddaily.com/8/1d/81dc9bdb52d04dc2/Blog/7dc/a96b1d.html
CNET News,
http://news.cnet.com/8301-13579_3-10291701-37.html
Ppsj.com (Pinpai Shijia), January 2010 [an unofficial database on Foxconn in Chinese]
http://pp.ppsj.com.cn/Foxconn/ or http://info.ppsj.com.cn/fushikangyuang/
http://msn.china.ynet.com/view.jsp?oid=62972169
http://space.tv.cctv.com/video/VIDE1273587193496888
People’s Daily,
http://english.peopledaily.com.cn/90001/90776/90882/6894595.html
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010-03/31/content_9664926.htm
News.163.com (Wang Yi), 9 April 2010 [in Chinese]
http://news.163.com/10/0409/09/63QMQA4J000146BD.html
New
http://big5.xinhuanet.com/gate/big5/news.xinhuanet.com/internet/2010-04/26/content_13425057.htm
Southern Metropolis Daily (Nanfang Dushi Bao),
Southern Metropolis Daily (Nanfang Dushi Bao),
http://gcontent.nddaily.com/8/1d/81dc9bdb52d04dc2/Blog/e41/1004ba.html
Southern Weekly (Nanfang Zhoumo),
(1) http://www.infzm.com/content/44883
(2) http://www.infzm.com/content/44881
http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2010-05/13/content_9842460.htm
Global Times,
http://china.globaltimes.cn/society/2010-05/531176.html
BBC, 18 May 2010
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia_pacific/10122989.stm
http://big5.ce.cn/xwzx/shgj/gdxw/201005/20/t20100520_21426406.shtml
Reuters, 21 May 2010
http://cn.reuters.com/article/companyNews/idUKTOE64K06120100521?symbol=AAPL.O
Endnotes
[1] The online blog hosted by media organization Sina in Chinese is entitled “Concerns about new generations of peasant-workers” (guanzhu xinshengdai nongmingong, 19 May 2010, http://t.sina.com.cn/1743939945). The nine signatories of the open statement are: Shen Yuan (
[2] As of May 2010,
[3] In Shenzhen, by the end of 2008, only 2.28 millions (or 26 percent) of 8.77 millions city population was classified as permanent residents (Shenzhen Government Online, http://english.sz.gov.cn/gi/200911/t20091120_1229134.htm). Unofficially it is estimated that Shenzhen’s total population has exceeded 12 millions. Foxconn’s Longhua and Guanlan plants in Shenzhen hire more than 420,000 employees. Most of the Foxconn workers are young migrants who do not have their rights to urban residency.
[4] The Electronic Industry Code of Conduct (EICC), established in 2004, includes more than 45 global electronics companies. See the EICC membership at http://www.eicc.info/MEMBERSHIP.htm.
[5] China Labor Watch press release dated 18 May 2010, “We are extremely tired, with tremendous pressure—A follow up investigation of Foxconn,” at http://www.facebook.com/notes/china-labor-watch-clw/we-are-extremely-tired-with-tremendous-pressure-a-follow-up-investigation-of-fxo/118113421562727.
[6] Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior press release dated
[7] See, for example, the award-winning 2009-2010 GlobalPost news series depicting “silicon sweatshops” across the

Students & Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior
Telephone: (852) 2392 5464 Fax: (852) 2392 5463
Email: sacom@sacom.hk Website: www.sacom.hk
Mailing Address: P.O.Box No. 79583, Mongkok Post Office,
SACOM, a Hong Kong-based non-profit organization founded in June 2005, aims to bring concerned students, scholars, labor activists, and consumers together to monitor corporate behavior and to advocate for workers’ rights. SACOM originated from a student movement devoted to improving the working conditions of cleaners and security officers under various universities’ outsourcing policies. The movement created an opportunity for students to engage in activism surrounding local and international labor issues.
SACOM is a core member of GoodElectronics, a global network on human rights and sustainable production in the electronics industry. For details about SACOM research reports and campaign activities, please visit our website at www.sacom.hk.
Contact Persons:
Debby Chan
SACOM Project Officer
Email: debby@sacom.hk
Tel: +852 6756 8964
Yi Yi Cheng
SACOM Project Officer
Email: yycheng@sacom.hk
Tel: +852 6012 0312
© Students and Scholars Against Corporate Misbehavior (SACOM)
Jenny Chan
SACOM Advisor
Email: wlchan@sacom.hk / jenny.chan.2009@rhul.ac.uk
Tel: +44 (0)7756 511404
- Jenny Chan 的blog
- 要发表评论,请先登录
