Tangshan, 200km south-east of Beijing, a city of about seven
million inhabitants in Hebei, China’s steel-making heartlands. It rose from the
ashes of a devastating 1976 earthquake that is said to have claimed 250,000
lives to become a heavy-industry powerhouse, propping up a massive Chinese
construction boom and churning out more steel in 2014 than the whole of the United
States. These days are apparently now over. The Fufeng steel plant on the
outskirts of Tangshan, a once booming industrial hub about 200km south-east of
Beijing, there is scant sign of those glory days.
Fufeng’s steel plant owners declared bankruptcy early last
year – laying off about 2,000 workers and sparking protests in the process when
in 2015 disgruntled former workers gathered to demand unpaid wages with police
facing off with demonstrators
Nearby, another company, China Metallurgical Hengtong Cold
Rolled Technology, also lies abandoned. Like many others in the region, has
been forced out of business by massive over-capacity and plummeting demand.
Parts of Tangshan’s once bustling industrial sprawl have
taken on the appearance of ghost towns. Homes vacated by laid-off workers have
been sealed up with metal sheets.
Steelworkers who still have jobs complain their salaries
have been cut as steel prices fall, government support is withdrawn, and their
employers struggle to stay afloat. At the nearby Guofeng mill, which is still
operating, but only just, pay has been cut by 25%.
“Life is really hard right now,” an employee complained. “Everything
here is about steel. If it shuts down, it’s over. If our mill closes, we will
have no land, no money and no work.”
Fan Jiangqiang explains that the region’s halcyon days had
come in 2008 and 2009 when business was booming.
“The supermarkets were always full of people. Many
businesses opened up. People would go out to karaoke and for drinks. People
consumed a lot,” Fan recalled. “But right now, things just keep going down.
More and more companies are going bankrupt.”
Cui Jianjun, who sells chickens said: “When the mills were
operating properly lots of migrants would come here to work. Now the mills have
closed, they’ve gone home. My business has suffered.”
China Labour Bulletin (CLB), a Hong Kong-based campaigning
group which monitors such unrest, recorded a dramatic escalation in strikes and
worker protests towards the end of last year. Across China there were 2,774
incidents in 2015, double the previous year’s figure of 1,379 incidents. “All
sectors of the economy are clearly experiencing problems,” said CLB’s Geoff
Crothall. “And the reason the workers are going out on strike and staging
protests is simply that they have no other option.” Crothall said that of the 51 “incidents” in
Hebei province last year, 15 had been related to the depressed steel industry,
with a very clear upsurge in the last quarter of 2015.
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