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The 2010 Chinese labour unrest refers to a series of labour disputes, strike actions, and protests in the south of the People's Republic of China that saw striking workers successfully receive higher pay packages.〔(China tells Japan wage demands "understandable" ) reuters.com, Sat 28 August 2010 1:17 pm EDT〕〔 Among the incidents were a string of employee suicides at Taiwan-owned electronics manufacturer Foxconn and strike actions at Honda factories in Guangdong province, both of which resulted in wage increases.〔 *For Foxconn suicides, see (【引用サイトリンク】title=Foxconn China Assembly Workers Receive Pay Raise ) *For Honda factories, see 〕 ''The Economist'' stated that wages were merely rising to make up for lost ground due to wage freezes,〔 and China's inflationary monetary environment at the time made regular pay rises a necessity for workers concerned with maintaining a high quality of life. Reuters quoted Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda, as saying, "this has both good and bad elements. A wage increase is not necessarily bad if properly managed. The experience of the past 100 years shows that auto workers become auto consumers also." The events at Honda and Foxconn were followed by a string of labour-related protests and strikes at foreign-owned factories,〔 mostly in the south of the country.〔 ==Foreign companies== Although most of the strikes did take place at foreign-owned facilities, a few Chinese companies also experienced labor unrest.〔("Labour strife rolls across China: ) Textile workers toiling for pennies say they’ve had enough" article by Bill Schiller in ''The Toronto Star'' 8 June 2010〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「2010 Chinese labour unrest」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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