SNOW WOES A HELPING HAND U.S. COMPANY BRIBERY CONTROVERSY BATTLING ANTI-SOCIAL BEHAVIOR GOOGLE THREAT: CHINESE REACTION LIFE LESSONS WHERE ARE CHINA'S BIGGEST SHIPYARDS?
It has been a tough year so far for Foxconn. With 12 employee suicides and the latest news of significant first half losses, 2009 is shaping up to be a year the company would likely want to forget. Hoping to leave this past behind, the company now has plans to shift its coastal operations inland. BON’s Kelda Yuen has more on Foxconn’s next move and what the decision means for the company and its workers.
Volvo C-O-O Steven Armstrong said the company is looking forward to seeing what opportunities it will have to cooperate with Geely in the future, after the change in ownership goes through.
Armstrong also made the point that one big challenge to Volvo in China is that it's a relatively small car company in a large market. And he said he expects it would take a lot of energy and effort to get the company's message across and establish a big enough presence in the market to grow.
As we've reported here on Beyond the Headlines, Foxconn, a massive Taiwanese company that manufactures products for a number of the world's most well-known electronics companies - including HP, Apple, and Dell - has been rocked by a string of suicides in its Mainland China factories.
The company claims to be doing its best to keep its workers happy and healthy, but since our report last week, there have been another three confirmed suicide attempts, bringing the total for the month of May to seven, the most of any month so far this year.
Now there's been some heated online debate here following the news that a U.S. telecommunications company has been fined for paying millions of dollars in bribes to Chinese officials. UTStarcom, a maker of telecommunications equipment, has agreed to pay $3 million in fines to settle civil and criminal charges with federal regulators.
The Securities and Exchange Commission said the company's China subsidiary paid nearly $7 million between 2002 and 2007 for 225 overseas trips by employees of its customers. The trips were purportedly for training, but regulators say many of them were to tourist destinations, like Las Vegas and Hawaii.
The Commission also accused the company of spending more than $4 million on expense-paid programs for Chinese government customers at U.S. universities. The case of UTStarcom has not gone unnoticed here in China.
In today's Blog of the Day we look at a post by newspaper columnist Sheng Dalin who has written a blog about this on the popular news portal Ifeng.com.