Are multination corporations such as Wal-Mart helpful or harmful to the global economy? To a lesser extent‚ multinational corporation such as Wal-Mart are harmful to the global economy. Multinational corporation is a corporation or company that is registered in more than one country or that has operations in two or more countries. Global economy generally refers to the economy‚ which is based on economies of all of the world’s countries’ national economies. Also‚ global economy can be seen as the
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Major ethical issues: • Gap Inc. is a multinational casual apparel chain retail store with “3000 supplier in 50 different countries”. The manufacturing environment‚ human right treatment and labour policy vary substantially among suppliers from substandard to appalling. • Gap Inc.’s customer were deceived to assume the products were “Made in USA”‚ under United States labour standards and human right policies; whilst‚ manufacturing factories were located in Saipan –a U.S. protectorate in Southeast
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over another person‚ for the purpose of exploitation". The Department of Justice notes that human trafficking frequently involves the trafficking of women and children for sexual exploitation and also often involves exploitation of agricultural and sweatshop workers‚ as well as individuals working as domestic servants. The University of Pittsburgh ’s Legal Paper (Jurist Law) estimates that human trafficking victimizes some 800‚000 people worldwide. (Jansen‚ 2006) While the article "Slavery in the
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there is a dark side to the super store. With its unlivable wages‚ history of instilling fear in workers‚ child labor‚ and disregard for working conditions‚ Wal-Mart is the perfect example of a company that is blind to human rights. The word “sweatshop” carries a terrible connotation: a shop or factory in which employees work long hours at low wages under poor conditions. In these types of factories‚ workers rights are disregarded and abused‚ yet these are the types of factories Wal-Mart generally
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some Canadian businesses closing but‚ many people were laid off from their jobs. This led to people having to find different jobs which treated its employees much worse. This is exactly what happened to Irene Duhamel‚ who ended up working in a sweatshop‚ she described the conditions‚ “It was so hot in the factory. All the windows were closed to keep in the humidity so the cotton would stay soft. It could get as hot as 105 degrees. You worked mindlessly without stopping.” She had to work 11 hours
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Nike: A Multinational Company in China Nike is one of the largest athletic shoe brands in the world and sells millions of shoes and clothing each year. The company was founded on January 25‚ 1964 by a University of Oregon track athlete Philip Knight and his coach Bill Bowermanas. It was first named Blue Ribbon Sports and it officially became Nike‚ Inc. on May 30‚ 1978 (Nike). As a multinational company‚ it operates retail stores domestically and overseas and all of the products it sells are manufactured
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cn/ShowAtl.asp?ID=257 Douglas‚ L Enderle‚ G. (1999). International Business Ethics. Univ. of Notre Dame Press: Indiana. Fair Labor Association Given‚ O. (1997). Frequently Asked Questions About Sweatshops and Women Workers. Feminist Majority Foundation. Retrieved May 1st‚ 2008 from; http://feminist.org/other/sweatshops/sweatfaq.html Hill‚ C In-Store. (2006). Strategy Report: New model ethics. In-Store. May 15‚ 2006‚ pp. 21. Kruegar‚ D. A. (2008). The Ethics of Global Supply Chains in China – Convergences
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Stephen Frost1* and Margaret Burnett2* 1 Department of Asian and International Studies‚ City University of Hong Kong‚ China 2 Corporate Environmental Governance Programme‚ University of Hong Kong‚ China Keywords: Apple; iPod; Foxconn; China; sweatshop; Hon Hai; supply chain; electronics Introduction to the Case A ll material in this case is based on publicly available information. The case is intended to be used for both research and teaching purposes. The authors make no judgment whatsoever
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Chapter 3 CASE ASSIGNMENT: Product (RED) Can a T-shirt Save the World? When Oprah and Bono walked down Chicago’s Magnificent Mile together in the fall of 2006‚ it was the shopping trip seen around the world. The famous duo attracted mobs of fans and extensive media coverage as they promoted a revolutionary new cause-marketing event called Product (RED). Bono urged people to buy (RED) products‚ explaining that a portion of the proceeds would go to The Global Fund to fight HIV/AIDS in Africa
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hid=18&sid=98bf2a86-44c4-4231-93b4-5f0e9c88f370@sessionmgr12&vid=3&bdata=JnNpdGU9ZWhvc3QtbGl2ZQ==#db=aph&AN=32918621#db=aph&AN=32918621>. "Nike’s Love Affair with Sweatshops: Still Doing It | Labor Notes." Labor Notes | Putting the Movement Back in the Labor Movement. Web. 18 Nov. 2010. <http://www.labornotes.org/blogs/2010/04/nikes-love-affair-sweatshops-still-doing-it>. "NOW with Bill Moyers. Politics & Economy. America and Jobs . Outsourcing | PBS." PBS: Public Broadcasting Service. Web. 18 Nov
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