Made In China Toys: Is Your Family Safe?
‘Made In China’ Toys: Is Your Family Safe? by
Sarah
Corlett
With the massive number of recalled goods manufactured in China
this past year, there is certainly cause for concern. From pet food
to children’s toys, the products found to be contaminated or
simply unsafe have hit families where they can truly be hurt.
A statistic that cannot be ignored is the fact that products made
in China account for 80% of all toys sold in the United States, and
a similar pattern holds true for the rest of the G8 countries
– the richest nations in the world. All of these countries
maintain high government-enforced safety standards in the
manufacture of toys, but China is behind in such regulation and
they find themselves short-staffed to enforce the regulations they
do have. The fact of the matter is, as long as large corporations
such as Mattel look to shave dollars off of their bottom line by
having their manufacturing done in the developing world, rather
than within the G8 countries where their toys are primarily sold,
these sorts of problems will continue to arise. The factories where
these goods are being produced use cheap components and even
cheaper labour. I know it’s a cliché, but you do very
often get what you pay for.
There are some people who have spoken up in defense of the practice
of farming out manufacturing jobs, as well as other jobs requiring
large numbers of workers (such as call centres), to the developing
world, saying that it reduces costs to the consumers. Frankly, I
believe that it only increases profits to the companies that use
these factories. However, when companies cut costs, somebody
somewhere has to pay them – and it seems that it usually ends
up being the shopper that is buying their toys. We’re seeing
it now, in the massive recalls that have probably only just
begun.
That is not to say that China hasn’t felt the sting of this
global controversy. The head of the Chinese toy factory at the
centre of the lead paint dispute took his own life in one of his
warehouses shortly after the world-wide August 2007 recalls that
brought so much negative attention to the country’s
manufacturing industry. Mattel has announced stricter scrutiny of
its own products prior to their distribution and some members of
the government of the United States have called for legislation to
detain Chinese made products at customs for full safety inspections
before allowing them to enter their country. With such a negative
light shining on their manufacturing industry and the Olympics
coming to Beijing, the Chinese government is likely to step up
regulation in its manufacturing industry to counteract the bad
public relations that they have received thus far. What that will
mean to large companies like Mattel is hard to predict at this
point, but I think that a higher cost for toys at the cash register
is a small price to pay for the safety of our children.
Sarah Corlett runs the successful toy resource The Toy Maker:
www.the-toy-maker.co.uk
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