2011-7-11
The private company's labor union holds regular meetings and negotiates with executives on salaries, bonuses, working conditions and accommodation as well as the operation of a charity fund. Various cultural and sporting activities are organized to enrich employees' lives. Voluntary contributions to the communities where the company's sites are located are encouraged.
Sun's office, established in May 2005, has been engaged in formulating CSR standards and promoting their implementation in China's textile industry. The sector was the first to release an annual industry CSR report, starting in 2006. This helped the textile industry to increase efficiency, lower carbon emissions, raise incomes and improve working and living conditions.
China's textile industry generated revenues of 4.69 trillion yuan in 2010, up 26.53 percent from the previous year. Meanwhile, the sector's profits rose 33.69 percent to hit 255 billion yuan. The sales profit rate and asset profit rate surged 1.91 and 4.72 percentage points respectively compared with 2005, CNTAC's statistics show.
Employment in China's scaled textile enterprises - each with a production value of more than 60 million yuan and workforce of more than 600 people - reached 11.6 million last year, an increase of 16.61 percent compared with 2005. Labor productivity hit 110,300 yuan per capita in 2010, with annual growth rate at 15.91 percent from 2005.
The average annual pay rise for textile workers was more than 20 percent during the 11th Five-Year Plan period (2006-2010), higher than the approximate 15 percent in the manufacturing sector in general.
Although CSR standards have been formulated and implemented, challenges still exist for China's textile industry.
"Faced with stricter standards on the environmental fallout, energy consumption and employee rights protection globally, all our companies should speed up the establishment of a CSR system that will directly influence their business development," said CNTAC Chairman Du Yuzhou.
Some foreign companies have accused China's labor-intensive and export-oriented textile industry of being high-polluting and providing poor working conditions.
Sun said helping foreigners to appreciate the real conditions of China's textile industry and cooperating with them to combine international standards with local circumstance are urgent tasks.
The CNTAC office has organized visits by many foreign downstream companies and international organizations, such as H&M, GAP and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. It also started collaborating with professional international CSR organizations, including the Foreign Trade Association - a group for European businesses that specialize in international trade issues - and the Business Social Compliance Initiative, when it first started formulating standards.
Zhu Hongren, a spokesman for the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, said that the textile industry is taking the lead in establishing a sector-wide CSR system of standards and producing and publishing reports. Lessons learned will be introduced to the nation's other industries, with a pilot project implemented in the electronics sector soon.
"The establishment of harmonious employment relations should be the basis of any company's sustainable development. We should help businesses create a sound working environment, improve the treatment of labor and inspire employees to actively involve themselves in their company's business growth," said Zhu.
Source:China Daily
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