Skip to main content

Working conditions at Apple manufacturing partner Pegatron come under fire

According to an upcoming report from the China Labor Watch, outlined by the Wall Street Journal, Apple’s China-based manufacturing partner Pegatron has come under fire for worker conditions. The report outlines several claims which shed a negative light on Pegatron:

  • Pegatron is claimed to be withholding worker IDs. This means that Pegatron employees are unable to work elsewhere because they lack proper identification.
  • The company is also claimed to be providing “poor living conditions” with “30-minute waits to enter their production facility, tight living quarters, and packed cafeterias.” Cold showers and packed dorms are also noted.
  • Workers are claimed to be working over 60 hours a week (Apple’s limit), while Apple’s June Supplier Responsibility paper points to a 46-hour work-week average for Pegatron employees.
  • At a Pegatron subsidiary, employees are said to be provided gloves that do not sufficiently protect from the materials used to create metal backplates for the iPad.

As for pay, the report claims that some workers are seeing their payment withheld. Within this issue, recruiting companies for Pegatron have come under fire for not paying the workers enough. These recruiting companies, in some situations, are even fining employees:

Recruitment firms, which are paid for each worker they refer, often take part of a worker’s pay if the employee fails to work a fixed period and also sometimes fails to provide legally mandated insurance that Pegatron says it is paying the recruiters to provide, according to labor groups. One worker from Henan province surnamed Zhu said she was hired through an intermediary recruiting company, and has now found that she has to work for three months to avoid fines from the recruiter. Ms. Zhu, who works on an iPhone assembly line, said she plans to leave the factory after three months. “They don’t tell you everything,” she said.

For its part, Apple has already responded to the newly arising complaints:

Apple, in a statement, said it is “committed to providing safe and fair working conditions throughout our supply chain.” It said that it has conducted 15 comprehensive audits at Pegatron facilities since 2007, including surprise audits within the past 18 months.

Apple said it confirmed that some labor brokers were withholding worker ID cards and demanded Pegatron “put a stop” to it. The U.S. company said it will investigate claims in the China Labor Watch report and take corrective action where needed.

Early last year, complaints regarding Foxconn/Apple working conditions reached new heights, including being discussed at a mainstream level. Since then, Apple CEO Tim Cook has visited Foxconn and sent a clear message to employees regarding the allegations: “We care about every worker in our worldwide supply chain. Any accident is deeply troubling, and any issue with working conditions is cause for concern.”

Pegatron has been an Apple partner for a number of years, but the firm has taken a new chunk of Apple product manufacturing orders this year as Apple seeks to diversify its global supply chain. 

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

You’re reading 9to5Mac — experts who break news about Apple and its surrounding ecosystem, day after day. Be sure to check out our homepage for all the latest news, and follow 9to5Mac on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn to stay in the loop. Don’t know where to start? Check out our exclusive stories, reviews, how-tos, and subscribe to our YouTube channel

Comments

  1. I feel bad for those workers.

  2. My Thoughts (@_8978) - 11 years ago

    Why doesn’t Apple hire China Labor Watch to audit its facilities or contribute to the supplier report?

    • rogifan - 11 years ago

      How do we know everything they’re reporting is accurate? And doesn’t Pegatron do work for more than just Apple? So why is Apple being singled out (rhetorical question, I know)?

  3. Why not build them here and demonstrate the commitment to growing the US economy? They may cost slightly more but obviously given the rabid demand they haven’t crossed the price point that drives away customers.

  4. PMZanetti - 11 years ago

    Once again, Apple will do whatever it can. It’s just a reality that the Chinese treat their own like garbage. And they get away with it, because the Chinese seem embarrassingly incapable of standing up for themselves.
    Looking forward to the day that population grows a pair and topples the tyranny they live under. First government, then corporate.

  5. willo (@mozfart) - 11 years ago

    This is *all* Apples fault. They are reckless and unprofessional in abusing labor forces around the world.
    Pegatron are innocent here, it´s all about Apple. How dare they abuse labor like this?
    This should be in every major newspaper and news outlet, and headline tomorrows news. Unacceptable.

    It does not matter that this is going on in just about ever major company in China, as long as Apple touches it – they are to blame and headlines will come. Bad of them. Blah blah blah.

    F@!$king hypocrite media.

    • rettun1 - 11 years ago

      Please just stop.

      It’s people like you who shed such negative light on Apple. Surely you don’t know the circumstances of the situation, so it’d be best if you pipe down. Unless you can provide evidence to back up your claims

  6. This is not news–in fact, it’s about a year late. Why didn’t this group mention these problems exactly one year ago when Apple was moving a lot of the production of the then-new iPhone 5 to Pegatron?

  7. Robert Epps - 11 years ago

    Time for a sternly-worded letter from Apple to Pegatron, that their respective CEOs can have a good laugh over while hanging out on each other’s 400-foot yacht.