http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/19/world/asia/19shenzhen.html?_r=1&oref=slogin


Chinese Success Story Chokes on Its Own Growth
 
 
Ryan Pyle for The New York Times
In Shenzhen workers' dormitories, frustration with hard labor, merciless 
factory bosses, low pay and miserable living conditions is palpable. 


By HOWARD W. FRENCH
Published: December 19, 2006
SHENZHEN, China - When Zhang Feifei lost her job in this booming Chinese 
factory town, she was not terribly concerned. Jobs had always been plentiful in 
Shenzhen's flourishing economy. 

City Limits
Articles in this series are examining the phenomenal growth of Shenzhen from a 
sleepy fishing village near Hong Kong to a booming Chinese metropolis.

Part 1: In Chinese Boomtown, Middle Class Pushes Back (December 18, 2006)

Multimedia
Video 
A Chinese City's Boom, Part 1 
Video 
A Chinese City's Boom, Part 2 
Enlarge This Image
 
Ryan Pyle for The New York Times
Migrants, unfazed by stories of the difficulties awaiting them, are drawn to 
Shenzhen by the promise of work. 

Then Ms. Zhang, a 20-year-old migrant laborer, lost her identity card and was 
shocked to find that no factory would hire her without a bribe that she could 
not afford. Desperate for money, she ended up working in a grimy two-room 
massage parlor in a congested alley here, where she has sex with four or five 
men each day.

"I was terrified at first, and I was really embarrassed not even knowing how to 
use a condom," said the soft-spoken young woman, casting her eyes downward as 
she spoke. "I didn't have any choice, though. Little by little, you have to get 
used to it." 

Few cities anywhere have created wealth faster than Shenzhen, but the costs of 
its phenomenal success stare out from every corner: environmental destruction, 
soaring crime rates and the disillusionment and degradation of its vast force 
of migrant workers, Ms. Zhang among them.

Shenzhen was a sleepy fishing village in the Pearl River delta, next to Hong 
Kong, when it was decreed a special economic zone in 1980 by the paramount 
leader Deng Xiaoping. Since then, the city has grown at an annual rate of 28 
percent, though it slowed to 15 percent in 2005. 

Shenzhen owed its success to a simple formula of cheap land, eager, compliant 
labor and lax environmental rules that attracted legions of foreign investors 
who built export-based manufacturing industries. With 7 million migrant workers 
in an overall population of about 12 million - compared with Shanghai's 2 to 3 
million migrants out of a population of 18 million - Shenzhen became the 
literal and symbolic heart of the Chinese economic miracle.

Now, to other cities in China, Shenzhen has begun to look less like a model 
than an ominous warning of the limitations of a growth-above-all approach. 

While grueling labor conditions exist in many parts of China, Shenzhen's 
gigantic plants, employing as many as 200,000 workers each, have established a 
particular reputation for harshness among workers and labor advocates. Monthly 
turnover rates of 10 percent or more are not uncommon, labor groups say. 

The tough working conditions, in turn, have helped spawn one of the most 
important labor developments in China in recent years: large-scale wildcat 
strikes and smaller job actions for better hours and wages. The Guangdong Union 
Association, a government-affiliated group, said there were more than 10,000 
strikes in the province last year.

Among Chinese economic planners, Shenzhen's recipe is increasingly seen as all 
but irrelevant: too harsh, too wasteful, too polluted, too dependent on the 
churning, ceaseless turnover of migrant labor.

"This path is now a dead end," said Zhao Xiao, an economist and former adviser 
to the Chinese State Council, or cabinet. After cataloging the city's problems, 
he said, "Governments can't count on the beauty of investment covering up 100 
other kinds of ugliness."

As the limits of the Shenzhen model have grown more and more apparent, other 
cities in China's relatively developed east are increasingly trying to 
differentiate themselves, emphasizing better working and living conditions for 
factory workers or paying more attention to the environment. 

"Some inland cities have started to provide migrants social security, including 
pension and other insurance," said Wang Chunguang, an expert in class mobility 
at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing. "In Chengdu, in Sichuan 
Province, residency controls are loosening up and education for migrant 
children is getting more attention."

Migrants do still arrive here, of course, drawn by the promise of work and 
undaunted by stories of the difficult life that awaits them. Some, like Ms. 
Zhang, who come here for the $100-a-month sweatshop salaries, end up trapped, 
literally too poor to leave. But many others quickly become disillusioned and 
return home. 

Increasingly short of workers, factories recently have increased assembly-line 
wages by as much as 20 percent. But even so, critics say, Shenzhen's boom has 
spread little wealth.

While the city is dependent on migrant labor to keep its factories running, 
onerous residency rules discourage migrants from settling here permanently and 
make it difficult for them to obtain public services from education to health 
care. 

"The government has evaded its responsibilities toward migrant workers," Jin 
Cheng, a member of an influential local civic forum, Interhoo, said bluntly.

The resulting rootlessness has fed a wave of crime of a sort hardly ever seen 
elsewhere in China. Gunfights, kidnappings and gang warfare are rife, and crime 
rates are skyrocketing.




Although the city does not publish crime data, the Southern Metropolitan News, 
one of the most reputable Chinese newspapers, reported that there were 18,000 
robberies in 2004 in Baoan, one of six districts in Shenzhen. By comparison, in 
Shanghai, a city of around 18 million, there were only 2,182 reported robberies 
for all of 2004, according to figures compiled by the city. 

 
Enlarge This Image
 
Ryan Pyle for The New York Times
Prostitution, often disguised in karaoke joints and massage parlors, but 
increasingly in the open, ranks as one of the city's biggest industries. 

City Limits
A Chinese City's Boom, Part 2 


 
Ryan Pyle for The New York Times
A park in Baoan, a district in Shenzhen where a newspaper said there were 
18,000 robberies in 2004. 

 
The New York Times

Near the gates of Foxconn, a huge electronics assembly plant that is one of the 
city of Shenzhen's largest employers, a half-dozen former factory workers 
lounged in the shade on a recent afternoon. 

Asked if it was their day off, one of them, a 20-year-old, explained that he 
had been fired when he developed lesions on his arms from exposure to paints 
and asked to switch jobs. Now, he said, he and his friends survived by "beating 
people up for a living."

In addition to shakedown crews like this one, prostitution, usually thinly 
disguised in karaoke joints and massage parlors, but increasingly in the open, 
ranks as one of the city's biggest industries. In Shenzhen's blue-collar 
neighborhoods, thick with fetid workers' dormitories, the frustration with hard 
labor, merciless factory bosses, low pay and miserable living conditions is 
palpable. 

"I've changed jobs many times," said one man, a onetime factory floor manager, 
who was lying on a bunk bed in a stiflingly hot room jammed with other workers. 
"The pressure is very high in these jobs. They don't give you weekends, or 
breaks - especially the Taiwanese companies."

Migrant workers describe the city's labor market as a predatory environment 
filled with unscrupulous job brokers, fraudulent training courses and a 
multitude of other scams aimed at cheating the most disadvantaged part of the 
population.

Yu Di, a 19-year-old from Hubei Province with a junior high school education, 
said he worked in a grimy watch-casing factory, loading and unloading heavy 
boxes from a truck 11 hours a day, six days a week. With a salary of about $80 
a month - and no benefits - Mr. Yu has to borrow money from his parents just to 
cover his living expenses. He lives in a dim and filthy dorm room, crammed with 
12 bunk beds and mattresses made of bare springs covered with cardboard. "The 
only thing I regret is not working hard in school," he said.

In the room next door, Zhou Hailin, 20, who grew up in Guang'an, the hometown 
of Deng Xiaoping, seems better off. Mr. Zhou, who came to the city four years 
ago, earns about $120 a month as a machinist in the same watch factory. 

To do so, though, he must work eight-hour shifts, plus three or four hours of 
mandatory overtime, six days a week. A typical workday, he said, ends at 10:30 
p.m., when he often goes to visit a sister who works in another factory nearby.

Asked if he ever visited downtown Shenzhen, which bristles with skyscrapers and 
shopping malls, he said he had never had time. "I have to work every day," Mr. 
Zhou said. "All the factory jobs here are the same. That's what it's like being 
a migrant laborer."

Mr. Zhou calmly accepts his lot, but for many the merciless grind of factory 
life is too much. Their health failing, or their dreams of amassing sizable 
savings broken, these workers opt to return home to simpler lives in the 
countryside.

"Shenzhen may seem prosperous," a worker said, sitting in his bunk in a steamy 
dormitory, "but it's a desperate place."


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