Visit Your Local PBS Station PBS Home PBS Home Programs A-Z TV Schedules Watch Video Support PBS Shop PBS Search PBS
Wide Angle human stories. global issues.
search
Home show finder watch online about the series global classroom

intro photo essay interactive atlas info-graphic resources
Land of Wandering Souls



context
In 1996, activists demonstrated against Nike's foreign labor policies at the opening of a new Nike store in San Francisco. One critic had earlier put it this way: a typical Chinese garment worker would need to work nine hours a day, six days a week for 1,500 years to earn Nike CEO Phil Knight's 1994 salary ($1.5 million). Similarly, Christian Aid, a labor advocacy group, found that in 1995 Nike workers in China, the Philippines and Thailand earned an average of just $1.44 per pair for shoes that typically sold for $80 in the United States.



Click products below for the social context behind the social policies of six global corporations.
policies
After an initial period of denial, Nike has instituted several policy changes intended to avoid exploitive labor conditions in the factories of its more than 700 suppliers. According to the company's 2001 Corporate Responsibility Report, Nike now employs a 30-person labor-compliance staff and submits to external audits by the Fair Labor Association (FLA). Among other things, these monitors ensure that Nike workers in 50 countries receive a legal minimum wage. In its report, Nike also pledges that it will gauge the fairness of legal wages against local living costs, and order adjustments where the legal wage is insufficient.

1 2 3 4 5 6 1 2 3 4 5 6


Additional Web Features:
Interactive Atlas - Compare the world's haves and have-nots.

Photo Essay - Track one telecom company's global odyssey.

Interactive Challenge - Test your knowledge of WTO-era China.

Economic Survey - Size up China's economic muscle.

Debate - What does the WTO mean for China?

Photo Essay - Argentina: from economic meltdown to political crisis

Tools
email this page

© 2002-2007 Educational Broadcasting Corporation. All rights reserved. [an error occurred while processing this directive]