Showing posts with label public health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public health. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Apple has joined the Fair Labor Association: What does it mean?

By Ellen Rosskam  and  Peter L. Schnall

We thought that the interested reader might want to know a bit more about the Fair Labor Association (FLA) which has been retained by Apple Corporation to evaluate whether Apple’s suppliers are adhering to Apple’s standards for the proper treatment of their workforce. This standard is outlined in the Apple Supplier Responsibility Progress Report (Apple_SR_2012_Progress_Report)  We quote from the report … “We require that our suppliers provide safe working conditions, treat workers with dignity and respect, and use environmentally responsible manufacturing processes wherever Apple products are made”. Unfortunately, as many readers are certainly aware questions have been raised about several companies that supply Apple as to whether or not they are in violation of these policies. Among the issues raised are excessive overtime (more than 60 hours of work per week), crowded dormitories, military like working conditions, lack of breaks, mental harassment, etc. (the list goes on and the reader should refer to earlier blogs posted here). Foxconn itself acknowledges turnover rates in excess of 75% per year (Walmart which is considered a terrible U.S. company to work for has a turnover rate of 50 to 60%). High turnover rates are considered a good indicator of the stressfulness of a company to work for.

Apple has responded to the barrage of news and criticisms about Foxconn ( a major Chinese supplier of Ipads and Iphones) by releasing for the first time a list of its official suppliers. More importantly, on January 13, 2012, Apple joined The Fair Labor Association (FLA) as a Participating Company (PC) - the first technology company to join the FLA. The FLA works to end sweatshop working conditions around the world. As a PC, Apple commits to bringing their entire supply chain into the FLA program. This means FLA will visit, inspect and evaluate companies like Foxconn as to their adhearance to Apple and FLA standards.

FLA’s Goals

The FLA promotes core international labor standards. Details of the FLA’s Code of Conduct based on core international labor standards are provided below.[1] 
The Fair Labor Association is a non profit organization that combines the efforts of socially responsible companies, civil society organizations and colleges and universities to protect workers’ rights and improve working conditions worldwide by promoting adherence to international labor standards. The FLA conducts independent monitoring and verification to ensure that the FLA’s Workplace Standards are upheld where FLA company products are produced. Through public reporting, the FLA provides consumers with credible information to make responsible buying decisions. FLA Participating Companies agree to uphold the FLA Workplace Code of Conduct throughout their supply chains and commit to the FLA’s Principles of Fair Labor and Responsible Sourcing...Like all new affiliates, Apple will align its compliance program with FLA obligations within the next two years.[2]

Well yes, but as they say the devil is in the details. It seems fair to ask if FLA is truly an independent organization able to carry out the mandate outlined above. The problem is that the monies for the extensive audits, salaries of staff, etc. required by FLA to conduct their evaluations all come from the companies that are members of the FLA. This means Apple is paying for its own audit. Obviously, this is a less than optimal situation.

The FLA Workplace Code of Conduct

The FLA Workplace Code of Conduct defines labor standards that aim to achieve decent and humane working conditions. The Code’s standards are based on International Labor Organization standards and internationally accepted good labor practices. These include practices generally considered for corporations that want to be recognized as “socially responsible.” PCs are expected to comply with the relevant laws and regulations of the country in which workers are employed and to implement the FLA Workplace Code in their applicable facilities. The FLA accredits independent third-party monitors and engages them to conduct un-announced audits annually of a group of randomly selected factories that supply products to FLA-affiliated brands and universities.

What is wrong with FLA’s Code of Conduct

These standards are good as far as they go but they are 25 years out of date.  A great of research has been undertaken examining not just the role of the physical environment in causing ill health but also the psychosocial work environment (e.g., job strain, ERI, social isolation, injustice, lack of mobility, etc.). Psycho-social work hazards are not even mentioned in any international labor standards related to occupational health and safety nor are they part of the FLA’s evaluation of the workplace.[3]  This is not surprising. Science evolves faster than the international standard setting process, which is long and arduous - even updating international labor standards can takes years. Needless to say, the FLA’s Code of Conduct also does not address psycho-social work hazards. This is why the director of the FLA – Auret Van Heerden could visit Foxconn, look at the well lit and clean factory floors and declare that “facilities are first-class” and “Foxconn is really not a sweatshop”. Yes it is first class and not a sweat shop compared to other Chinese companies but this does not make it a healthy place to work.

Given the FLA’s flexibility it would be good if its Code were revised to address psycho-social stressors. Implementing the FLA’s Code is no easy undertaking in countries where labor laws are weak and not enforced, such as in China, or where there are no protective labor laws at all.




Thursday, January 5, 2012

What a Surprise: Apple Profit Margins Rise at the Expense of Foxconn and Pegatron Corporation


Bloomberg reports in an article today that Apple's margins have widened at the expense of its main supplier as Foxconn Technology Group cuts prices to retain orders for the iPhone and iPad.

The profit spread at Hon Hai Precision Industry, Foxconn's Taipei-listed flagship, has narrowed to 1.5 percent since the debut of the iPhone in June 2007 as Apple's operating margin more than doubled over the past five years, surpassing 30 percent.

Apparently, Foxconn as well as Pegatron are willing to sacrifice profit margins in exchange for volume and scale.  Both companies have seen profit margins decline despite increase sales due to rising salaries and lower sale prices to Apple Corp. on Ipads and Iphones.

This process puts both companies under increasing pressure to get more from workers for less. So if salaries go up it becomes critical to increase worker productivity.

Maybe this has something to do with repetitive motion disorders, stress disorders, suicides and explosions at plants not ready for production but which are pressed into service nonethless (see my previous blog).


Saturday, May 21, 2011

Peter's Award Presentation Speech for Bob Karasek on the occasion of his LIFETIME CAREER ACHIEVEMENT AWARD at the 2011 Work and Health Conference

One nice thing about a blog is that you can post personal stories. I want to share with you an event that occurred Thursday May 19th 2011 at the APA/NIOSH sponsored Work, Stress and Health 2011 Conference which I am attending in Orlando Florida. I was given the honor of introducing Bob Karasek on the occasion of his being awarded the Career Achievement Award by the organizers of the conference. It is the highest honor our profession can bestow on our colleague.

Here is my presentation to Bob on the occasion of his APA/NIOSH Career Achievement Award – May 19 2011

The Job strain hypothesis was formulated 35 years ago and first tested in a paper appearing in the July issue of the AJPH in 1981. Since then Job strain has become the most widely researched psychosocial model in the world, currently being used in 1220 projects in 65 countries.

For four decades now Robert Karasek has championed the JCQ, and the dual hypotheses of job strain as a risk factor for illness, and the active-passive quadrant dimension as a predictor of  active learning, human development and social involvement. Each hypothesis has generated important insights into our world of work.

One major reason for the importance of the job strain model resides in the fact that it provides a connection between work organization, and health. It places the individual and his perceptions of his work environment in the forefront of the issues demanding our attention while echoing in a more modern lexicon Marx’s ideas of alienation. It underscores the fact, as well as the degree to which traditional economic analyses of work with their emphasis on productivity, and wealth production ignore the negative human consequences of work in its current form.

Bob, your active role in theory and research has impacted many concerned about work and health. From individuals concerned that their work environment was potentially dangerous, to labor organizations striving for healthy working conditions, to businesses interested in maximizing productivity and to governments setting social policy, all have been impacted by ideas advanced by you Robert often working in collaboration with your lifelong colleague Tores Theorell.

Bob, one of your greatest accomplishments has been the support you have provided to a large number of your colleagues. As you know, much of my own work has been both inspired and shaped by your ideas about the work environment. While I have known you since our participation in the ECHDG in the 1970’s my first involvement in research after leaving the practice of medicine was when I joined your Columbia Job Heart project and with which I worked for 1 year in 1980. My experience working with you Bob, as well as Tores Theorell, Dean Baker, Carl Pieper and Joe Schwartz led me to seek a post-doc to further my training in epidemiology. My thesis proposal ultimately morphed into the 14 year long NYC Worksite BP study in collaboration with Dr. Thomas Pickering (PI) in which you and Jeff Johnson were both active participants.

Over the decades Bob, you and I have collaborated on many projects. From research at Cornell to papers for the AJPH to revisions to the JCQ (now soon to be JCQ 2.0), and conferences from Japan to Amsterdam. I hope that this collaboration will continue for at least another 20 years or longer. Also your work is not yet finished. I found, after an informal poll of your colleagues, that a 2nd edition of your book "Healthy Work" (Basic Books 1990) which builds on your last 20 years of research and experience is wanted from you and Tores.

I want to thank you now Bob for your support and the inspiration you have provided me and many others over the past 4 decades.

Both Tores and I have collaborated on a salute to you, composing a song in your honor, which Tores (the only professional musician among the 3 of us) has volunteered to perform.

For Bob when he received his life time career award in May 2011

Melody by Cole Porter: My heart belongs to daddy

(was sung by Eartha Kitt)

He´s such a man, he knows it all
He started the MODEL, it´s rolling
Demand-control - he made us recall
Why our work is not always strolling

Equilibrium, his newest world
Is offering all of us insight
Once again he is throwing light
He is always on a height

He is father of the DC model
In the seventies he triggered us
Cause he knew the way to coddle
Lots of data and computer-based fuss

Now he harvests all the progress
Let him beam and glory with pride
Dear Bob, we like your success
Let us celebrate now at your side

From Töres Theorell

Monday, May 9, 2011

What is wrong with this advertisement appearing in the LA Times on Sunday May 8th 2011?

I will provide an answer to this question tomorrow which will get into the problems that medicine as a profession has with the measurement, diagnosis and labeling of health conditions in our industrial society. Yes, there is something seriously wrong here. Can you leave me a comment and tell me what it is?