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GE head slams China over hostility: report

Strike ends at Japanese electronics plant in China: report
Beijing (AFP) July 3, 2010 - Workers at a Japanese-owned electronics factory in northern China ended a strike and returned to work Saturday after reaching an agreement with their employers, state-run media reported. The strike by 3,000 workers at the Tianjin Mitsumi Electric Co Ltd factory in the city of Tianjin began late Tuesday in a dispute over pay and benefits. It was latest in a wave of labour unrest to hit foreign-run companies in China, highlighting discontent among the millions of Chinese who make many of the world's products but do so for low salaries and in poor conditions. The plant resumed production Saturday after an agreement was reached in which "the workers' lawful demands were satisfied," Xinhua news agency said, citing a company statement, but giving no further details.

Earlier in the week the company said that the strike had halted all its production lines. The company makes electronic components and computer parts. Japanese automakers Toyota and Honda also have been forced to halt production at China assembly plants several times in recent weeks after strikes at auto parts suppliers. Taiwan high-tech giant Foxconn offered its employees in southern China wage hikes after a spate of worker suicides, and is now planning to shift some of its production to other parts of the country to counter rising costs.
by Staff Writers
London (AFP) July 2, 2010
The head of General Electric has slammed China, alleging a hostile approach towards foreign companies, the Financial Times reported on Friday, but the group objected that the comments were taken out of context.

"I really worry about China," CEO Jeffrey Immelt told a business audience in Rome, according to the FT.

"I am not sure that in the end they want any of us to win, or any of us to be successful."

Immelt added: "China and India remain important for GE but I am thinking about what is next."

The GE chief referred to the "most interesting resource-rich countries" in the Middle East, Africa, Latin America plus Indonesia.

"They don't all want to be colonised by the Chinese. They want to develop themselves," Immelt added, according to the paper.

The FT also reported that the CEO was critical of US President Barack Obama, expressing concern that excessive US regulation, in the wake of the global financial crisis, would dampen a "tepid" economic recovery.

"We are a pathetic exporter ... we have to become an industrial powerhouse again but you don't do this when government and entrepreneurs are not in synch."

However, GE issued a swift response to the FT story, arguing that some of the quotes were inaccurate.

"The comments attributed to GE CEO Jeff Immelt by the FT were taken out of context and, in some instances, inaccurately reported," the company said in a statement.

"Mr. Immelt's commentsat a private dinner focused on therelationship between business and government in generaland did not single out President Obama.

"Mr. Immelt also discussed the attractiveness and importance of China as a market for GE during a discussion on the complexities of doing business globally."



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