Type | Working Paper |
Title | Workers in the Supply Chain of Electronics Industry in India: The Case of Samsung |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://amrc.org.hk/system/files/Workers in the Supply Chain of Electronics Industry in India.pdf |
Abstract | This paper attempts to analyse the dynamics of the electronics industry and the fate of electronics workers in India in the broader context of the problems of India’s economic development in the new global politico - economic regime. The electronics industry recorded a significant growth after liberalization. However, the nature of this growth is raising serious concerns. The growth is mainly in IT services, and not in electronics manufacturing. Moreover, whatever is the growth in electronics manufacturing, it appears to be more import intensive. The value added in this industry in India is merely 5 - 10 per cent. All electronics giants with manufacturing bases in India, such as Samsung, LG, Dell and Hewlett Packard, import 90 per cent of parts from overseas. In the case of Samsung the majority of the components are imported from Korea, Singapore and China. Current government initiatives in the form of a new electronics policy and the new manufacturing investment zones poli- cy are an attempt to accelerate the growth in electronics manufacturing. T he size and scale of oper- a t i o n s o f t h e m a j o r i t y o f e l e c t r o n i c s m a n u f a c t u r i n g u n i t s i n I n d i a r e m a i n s m a l l , a n d t h e h u g e m a j o r i- ty of them are in the informal sector. Moreover, a significant portion of jobs in the formal sector are also informalised. The huge majority of units engages less than 40 workers each and therefore is exempted from various labour laws including the Furnishing Returns and Maintaining Registers stat- ute. Further relaxations in labour laws are extended to electronics industries under various schemes in most of the states of India. The expansion of this industry in India is comparatively new and therefore the majority of the workforce in this sector is mostly first generation workers. There are rarely any trade unions in electronics sector. However, recent strikes in some electronics manufacturing plants show that the process has started. The working conditions in the industry are some of the worse. The majority of workers receive only minimum wages. There are serious prob- lems of occupational health and safety. Samsung in Noida (Uttar Pradesh) is using the strategy of exploiting the apprentice workers in a big way. There are no agency workers in this factory. Howev- er, the ITI apprentices constitute about 50 per cent of the workforce. There is a significant differ- ence in wages of regular workers and apprenticeship. It seems that this is going to be a general trend in the industry. To organize the electronics industry workers, it is necessary to focus on the cluster of electronics manufacturing plants emerging in various regions. Awareness building cam- paigns among workers in these clusters and among the students of ITIs that are supplying the ap- prentices to these clusters can be used as an initial strategy to create common platforms of elec- tronics industry workers and ITI students. |
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