For the past three years, Korean guitar workers and their supporters have been protesting the closure of these factories which left 123 workers without a job. Workers are asking for these factories to be reopened under more just conditions. Even the Korean courts ruled in favor of the workers on this one. For many of these guitar workers, making guitars is not just a job- it is also their art. For some, it is what they have been doing their entire lives.
The workers are demanding that Cort reopen the factories in Korea and return jobs to the displaced workers, They need the support, of musicians, artists, cultural producers, media makers and anyone who believes that guitars - and therefore music- should be made under fair and humane conditions. Workers have set up a blog where the public can hear their stories and find out about opportunities to support this cause.
As part of our work to end sweatshops, ILRF has contacted Fender directly and is looking forward to working with the company to ensure that the workers producing their guitars get what they deserve.
A coalition of Korean workers and their supporters are voicing their demands this week in Anaheim, California. Anaheim is the site of the NAMM Show, an annual event and one of the largest music product trade shows in the world. Korean workers and their supporters are calling on anyone and everyone who can move, shake and rattle to join in on the noise. Tom Morello or Rage Against the Machine and Boots Riley of the Coup did their part on Wednesday night, letting the guitar industry know let the industry know: it’s not just about the instrument, it’s about the kind of world we want to live in.
For the most up to date schedule of events in Anaheim check out the worker’s international solidarity blog
Comments
re: Do You Know Who Made Your Guitar?
Leslie - good report but it's "Ibanez" not "Ibenez" . If you're going to be a credible writer, fact-checking has to be job1.
re: Do You Know Who Made Your Guitar?
@CapitalistPig-Dog - you could not be more misguided. Gibson, Fender et al didn't leave the USA because of federal minimum wage laws or other regulation - luthiery is a skilled job paying $20-50/hr -well above any federal minimum - they went to Asian sweatshops because corporations are slaves to their shareholders. Share price and dividend are Job1.
I propose a compromise:
I would like it to be a federal mandate to US corporations doing business overseas, that they must pay US Federal min. wage, or the labor cannot be used as COGS (cost of goods sold), meaning 100% of the cost would come out of taxable income instead of being considered a cost of production.
The result would be two-fold: 1)It would raise the standard of living in the communities where those plants are in operation, creating a whole new class of consumers who could buy the products they are making, plus demand for other USA-built products. 2)It would make the move to China/Korea/Malaysia less attractive in the first place.
If it's true that our workforce is 4x as productive as those workforce(s) - then $7/hr spent here equals $1.75/hr spent there. Subtract the cost of overseas packaging and shipping and you're roughly even-money, or close enough that the "juice" of dealing with Asia is no longer worth the squeeze.
DRK
re: Do You Know Who Made Your Guitar?
Wow, thanks for posting this -- I didn't know about the labor issues in this industry. It's good to know Tom and Boots were doing the right thing as usual. I hope the companies are watching.
re: Do You Know Who Made Your Guitar?
How about letting the market dictate the price of goods and commodities and then paying a wage that is commensurate with demand. Too much government involvement and regulation on the production end is what caused these jobs to be lost to American companies in the first place.
Whenever production costs are raised by arbitrary government mandates, companies will close shop and look for greener pastures elsewhere.
re: Do You Know Who Made Your Guitar?
I think guitars are pretty cool,I am thinking about taking guitar lessons and it's very interesting to know how these were made