The China Price
Chinese competitive advantage.
30.07.2008
36 °C
Every Wednesday we have been lucky enough to have industry speakers come to Multifunction Hall A and lecture us on how achieve our dreams.
Alexandra Harney was by far the best seminar speaker we have had so far. Her book The China Price is about the topic of those cheap items that come out of China and what we pay for it. How it affects our lives and everything from politics, to policies written by the government to our family budget. How it affects the daily lives of Chinese workers and other migrant workers in China.
She was an eloquent speaker, never boring, knew exactly what she was saying and could even give the background information of detailed issues, themes, policies regarding her topic. Which led us to believe she was on top of her game. At the end of the speech my fellow students fired some tough questions that she was readily poised perfectly to answer. Alexandra was able to retort in smart and calculated ways.
The thing that Ms. Harney said that stuck out in my mind the most was how to make a difference as an American.
Know your purchase. Know where items come from and what the company policies are of those objects that you buy the most or prefer. Learn about how and where things are made. Most importantly, ASK QUESTIONS!!
All in all if I had a dream job it would be hers. Challenging yet it would be fulfilling, interesting and difficult, basically to be knowledgeable about issues theat matter to a majority of the world. To make informed decisions and have your word carry weight on paper about things that matter, by going out there and exploring them firsthand.
In her book, Alexandra Harney explains how China as a country has redefined the global manufacturing map. “China has put legions of people out of work around the world and become an open wound in international trade relations. “ She writes, “Shopping has become cheaper because of China, in fact one estimate says that products made in China have saved the American family $500 dollars a year.
She mentions, how wages in China, even out in the middle of nowhere, have gone up and the cost of goods are increasing, wages having gone up almost 30 percent in the last two or three years. Ms. Harney asks us how this affects the environment and the daily lives of those indirectly dealing with the effects of careless actions. She opened her lecture with personal tales of individuals who live the lives that most consumers in first world countries pretend don’t really exist. The big box companies and our government almost truly believe that America doesn’t care where or how they get what they consume, as long as it’s cheap by the actions we lead. Do we really not care? Why does everyone think this way about the U.S.A.? Several of her accounts on personal details of lives of factory workers left much to think about and deeply ponder. One story was about human rights and how Chinese workers are beginning to demand their rights. Another story told of what it takes, for sweatshops and large factories to cook up fake documents, to fool employers like Wal-mart and Target to make more money. While in the meantime not paying employees even $100 dollars a month for 18-hour shifts and denying them insurance or health benefits.
The aim of her lecture was to bring awareness as to discovering the true cost of China’s competitive advantage. “Who are the people behind the China price? How do they make goods so cheaply? At what cost to them and to us? And how long can they keep it up?
Posted by Pamelieux 8:06 PM Archived in Living Abroad | China Comments (2)



