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3. masalah dengan pemasokBanyak produsen perangkat keras komputer bergantung pada perusahaan asing untuk menyediakan bahan baku; membangun Bagian-bagian komputer; dan mengumpulkan hard drive, monitor, keyboard, dan komponen lainnya. Sementara ada banyak keuntungan untuk berurusan dengan pemasok Asing, hardware produsen mungkin menemukan aspek-aspek tertentu dari bisnis mereka (seperti kontrol kualitas dan biaya, pengiriman, dan komunikasi) lebih rumit ketika berurusan dengan pemasok di negara lain.Selain masalah bisnis ini cukup umum, produsen perangkat keras kadang-kadang menghadapi serius masalah etika yang berkaitan dengan pemasok luar negeri mereka. Dua isu-isu yang telah muncul baru-baru ini melibatkan (1) pemasok yang menjalankan pabrik-pabrik mereka dengan cara yang tidak aman atau tidak adil bagi pekerja mereka dan (2) bahan baku pemasok yang menyalurkan uang untuk kelompok-kelompok yang terlibat dalam konflik bersenjata, termasuk beberapa yang melakukan kejahatan dan manusia pelanggaran hak asasi. Pada Februari 2009, mengkhawatirkan informasi datang kepada terang tentang pabrik plastik Meitai dan elektronik di Dongguan kota, Provinsi Guangdong Cina. Pabrik ini, pada kenyataannya, mewakili sebuah contoh ekstrim pemasok yang menjalankan pabrik dalam cara yang tidak aman dan tidak adil. Meitai plastik mempekerjakan 2.000 pekerja, kebanyakan Perempuan muda, yang membuat peralatan komputer dan periferal — seperti kasus printer dan keyboard — untuk Dell, IBM, Lenovo, Microsoft, dan Hewlett-Packard products.70 berdasarkan pada penelitian dilakukan antara Juni 2008 dan January 2009, the National Labor Committee (a human rights organization based in the United States) published a report in February 2009 highly critical of the work environment at the factory.71According to the report, young workers were required to sit on hard wooden stools for 12 hours a day, working on an assembly line that never stopped. Workers were prohibited from talking, listening to music, raising their heads from their work, or putting their hands in their pockets. Employees were fined for stepping on the grass of the factory grounds, not trimming their fingernails, and for being even one minute late. A worker who needed to use the restroom had to wait until there was a group break. The average workweek consisted of 74 hours, with a take-home pay of $57.19—well below the amount necessary to meet subsistence-level needs in China. If a worker took a Sunday off, she was docked one-and-a-half-day’s wages. Workers were housed 10 to 12 per dorm room. The dorms had no air conditioning, and temperatures in the rooms could reach the high 90s in the summer. Workers were required to walk down several floors to get hot water in a small bucket to use for personal hygiene.72Manufacturers who use rare raw materials face another ethical issue related to the use of foreign suppliers: how to ensure that their suppliers do not funnel money to groups that engage in armed conflict or commit crimes and human rights abuses. Manufacturers of computers, digital cameras, cell phones, and other electronics frequently purchase rare minerals such as gold, tin, tantalum, and tungsten for use in their products. Unfortunately, some of these purchases are helping to finance the deadliest conflict in the world today —the war in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The war began in 1998 and has dragged on long after a peace agreement was signed in 2003. During the war and its aftermath, over 5 million people have died—mostly from disease and starvation—making it the deadliest conflict since World War II.73In Congo, many mines are controlled by groups that engage in armed conflict and inflict human rights abuses on local populations. The Enough Project’s “Raise Hope for Congo” campaign is trying to get large electronics firms to trace and audit their supply chains to ensure that their suppliers do not source minerals from mines in Congo that are controlled by armed groups. This is often easier said than done because of the long, complex supply chain and often disreputable middlemen involved in the minerals trade. As manufacturers struggle with these issues, some are trying to use their influence to demand that their suppliers stop sourcing frommines that continue to fund violence in Congo and elsewhere.74Discussion Questions1. What responsibility does an organization have to ensure that its suppliers and business partners behave ethically? To whom is this responsibility owed?2. How can an organization monitor the business practices of its suppliers and business partners to determine if they are behaving in an ethical manner ?
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