When people talk about “bearing a cross,” they usually mean being oppressed,  going to jail and suffering physical torment, so it’s surprising to hear a  Taiwanese tycoon who lives in luxury and flies in a private plane saying he is  “bearing a cross” because some employees at his factories in China have killed  themselves. Even if he is as upset as he claims, the phrase is poorly chosen. If  those workers could enjoy even 1 percent of the tycoon’s daily comforts, they  probably wouldn’t want to jump off roofs.
Living in luxury and bearing  crosses — this strange combination highlights how businesses investing in China  are entangled in a heartless and contradictory world. On the one hand, these  employers provide impoverished Chinese with employment opportunities, while on  the other they rely on the Chinese government’s repressive policies to help them  exploit the workers and amass great wealth for themselves.
For government  and business to connive in bullying workers in a country that continues to call  itself “socialist” and “communist” is the scandal of the century. While China’s  so-called reforms under the successive leaderships of former Chinese president  Jiang Zemin (江澤民) and Chinese President Hu Jintao (胡錦濤) have been carried out in  the name of “socialism,” they have created a gap between rich and poor that is  wider than that of the US. Whatever social safety net China once had has been  stripped away, leaving no relief from exploitation.
While the path taken  under Jiang and Hu is essentially capitalist, China lacks the freedom,  democracy, legal system and other checks and balances needed to keep an  otherwise ruthless capitalist system in check. China lacks independent labor  unions, free and fair media and a social welfare system. China’s reforms have  deregulated the economy, allowing unbridled exploitation of labor, while the  political system remains as rigid as ever. Independent unions are not allowed  and there is no right to strike.
When a free market operates under a  developed legal framework, the rules of the game are set, ideally, through a  democratic process. The path to wealth depends on an individual’s ability, so it  is not a sin to be rich. US software tycoon Bill Gates is wealthier than many  nations alone, but he uses his wealth for philanthropy. There hasn’t been news  of any Microsoft employees being abused to the point that they jump off  buildings.
It is different in China, where the law counts for much less.  There, you may only get rich if you have special privileges and the right  connections. This is as true for overseas investors as it is for those Chinese  who have made fortunes through the restructuring of state-owned  enterprises.
While the rich get richer, workers live in internment  camp-like conditions. Toiling day and night and selling their labor for low pay,  there is no way out for them. These are the very conditions that Karl Marx  predicted would lead to a workers’ revolution.
The suicides at Foxconn  and strikes against low wages at Honda and elsewhere in China show that Chinese  workers have had enough. The Chinese government, for its part, does not publicly  dare to go on suppressing the workers and protecting employers’ interests.  Rather, it is quite happy to shift the blame for exploiting workers onto  overseas investors.
By conceding big wage hikes, Foxconn and Honda may be  writing a new page in the history of China’s reforms. They are bringing to an  end the stage in which China offered ultra-low wages. As these events unfold,  Chinese workers are waking up and are now ready to break out of a contradictory  system that thrives, at its core, at the expense of their  rights.
James Wang is a journalist based in  Washington.
TRANSLATED BY JULIAN CLEGG 
Source: Taipei Times - Editorials 2010/06/19
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