Sentences with phrase «of cheap labour»

In other words, it's a source of cheap labour for the technology industries.
Employers, both regulated and unregulated, take advantage of this pool of cheap labour.
They discussed the pros and cons of cheap labour in developing countries, child labour and cases of environmental damage.
They are being bought and sold on the market, a gift of cheap labour to Canadian business.
Besides, for the hundreds of millions of rural peasants who have already migrated to cities — supplying factories with an endless supply of cheap labour — life in cities like Shanghai, Beijing or Shenzhen means being treated like second - class citizens, since their access to social services and education for their children is tightly limited.
If this kind of framework is not in place critics will be justified in viewing this scheme as another chance for employers to take advantage of cheap labour who they have little reason to feel responsibility for.
On competitiveness, they probably contribute a lot since it's a source of cheap labour for work most Canadians won't do.»
Some call the sourcing of cheap labour abroad «modern day slavery» however others will argue they are providing jobs that would otherwise not be present which in turn can raise the standard of living in these countries.
And Spielberg can handle actors - Neeson as Schindler, the German profiteer whose use of cheap labour in his Cracow factory saved 1,100 Jews from death; Kingsley as Stern, the canny accountant; Fiennes as Goeth, bloodless commandant of Plaszow camp.
«For too long, the benefits of immigration went to employers who wanted an easy supply of cheap labour, or to the wealthy metropolitan elite who wanted cheap tradesmen and services — but not to the ordinary, hard - working people of this country,» Mr Brokenshire is set to say.
In the 80s, these countries, and also China, were able to take advantage of the world crisis by playing a part in globalisation of exchange of goods (through their relative advantage of cheap labour), and calling for foreign investment and by signing up their development projects within a nationally governed strategy (in the case of Korea and Korea, but not the South - east Asian countries).
It was effected in a range of ways: sheer force; the removal of children from their families; the withdrawal of «permissive occupancy» because titles to traditional lands had been granted to others and Aboriginal people no longer provided a useful pool of cheap labour; in many cases people were induced to move «voluntarily» to settlements and missions simply to gain access to food and basic services as competing land use destroyed the resource base of traditional life.
The Japanese had a supply of cheap labour — Allied prisoners of war.
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