Shenzhen is a town of migrants. The estimated median ages is between 15 and 25 and the old and battered sits in wild contrast with the brand new. Even in the few years between my
last visit and this one, the city has changed so drastically that I barely recognized it. The last time I was here I imagined the place as a cross between a favela and
Blade Runner, high and low tech mashed together, the sharp tails of known carcinogens mixing with the soft end of Suntory in a highball glass and the scent of a young executive assistant's Chanel No 5. Now it's mostly Suntory and Chanel, the carcinogens banished to the outskirts of town. There's a boom in China, and Foxconn's executives see a way out of many of the messes, real or imagined, that plagued the company. Foxconn is pinning their future success on their employees' future success. While this may seem like uncessary largesse, it is an interesting bet on the future of a working class that has been transformed into a middle class. And those workers, once forced by circumstance to stand for ten hours a day, are workers that no longer need or want what seemingly meager financial benefits Foxconn has to offer.
Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/yMmUECGJysc/
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