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Health & Wellness

Toxic Toys: Not Just a Health Issue for Kids

By Emily Xu and Zhang Jianyi, Women's Media Center. Posted December 20, 2007.


The young women who work in China's toy factories are often unaware of their own exposure to harmful toxins.
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Just as Detroit is famous for making cars and Napa for producing wine, Cheng Hai in Guangdong Province, not far from Hong Kong, is known for manufacturing toys for children all over the world, especially the United States. Chunfeng Shen at age 18 is already a three-year veteran toy maker in the city's industrial district.

She came from Fujian Province to work in a booming industry. While her factory produces toy bricks for more than 10 well-known brands, she didn't know whether their products would be exported or what their eventual price would be -- the foreign market is too far away and mysterious. She is even less aware about the controversies over China's toy product safety and her own potential exposure to unsafe paints. "I didn't want to go to school any more," she said. "I wanted to earn money."

China is the biggest toy manufacturing base in the world, with about 8,000 toy factories and three million workers. In 2006, China exported more than 22 billion toy parts, bringing in 7 billion U.S. dollars, of which 3.2 billion USD came from the United States. Women from all over China flock to Cheng Hai to work in its many toy factories. Most of the workers are women, said Yan Yang, a 26-year-old accountant at the Auldey toy factory, "because the factories need workers who can be manipulated flexibly and quickly." Of 2,000 Auldey workers in Cheng Hai, 70 percent are women.

For many of the young women who work in Cheng Hai, the toy industry offers better opportunities than other job prospects. Shen, for example, changed jobs within the industry three times before coming two months ago to the Xinjiqi toy factory, which was founded 10 years before by a local entrepreneur. Her father is a construction worker while her mother works at home as a housewife. Her two younger brothers are still in primary school. She says that many of the women come to Cheng Hai not because their families are terribly poor, but because they heard the toy business here was flourishing. Compared to women who work in other industries, they feel that they have relatively better working conditions.

The women workers in Cheng Hai Toy Industrial District have to work at least two four-hour shifts every day, earning about 135 USD a month, well above the 104 USD average for Chinese manufacturing jobs. "It is enough for my daily life," said Shen. The only change she has noticed is the recent elimination of overtime work, which has reduced her income at a time when the plants are usually bustling to meet holiday demands.

Her coworker, Cuiyun Jiang, left her hometown in Fujian Province to work at the LianXia Toy Factory eight years ago, because, she said, she could not get good marks in school. But Jiang is not content with the salary that she and Shen are paid. "We work very hard every day," she said. "I should send money home, but it's not enough." Her rural farming parents have four children. Two of her siblings are seeking work and one is still in middle school.

"We don't get our salaries paid every month regularly," said Jiang. "When we need money, we must borrow some from the boss first. The salaries are counted at the end of each year." If there is any breakdown in the payment chain from the multinational toy companies to the many tiers of subcontracted factory owners in China, the workers could potentially lose an entire year's wages.


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See more stories tagged with: health, china, toys, product safety, consumer safety, toy factories

Emily Xu is a freelancer in China. Zhang Jianyi is a junior journalism student at Cheung Kong School of Journalism and Communication at Shantou University in southern China.

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