Congress Spotlights ‘Serious’ Forced Labor Concerns With Chinese Shopping Sites
Lawmakers are flagging what they say are likely significant violations of U.S. law by Temu, a popular Chinese shopping platform, accusing it of providing an unchecked channel that allows goods made with forced labor to flow into the United States.
In a report released Thursday, the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party said that Temu, a rapidly growing site that sells electronics, makeup, toys and clothing, had failed “to maintain even the facade of a meaningful compliance program” for its supply chains, and was likely shipping products made with forced labor into the United States on a “regular basis.”
The report stems from an ongoing investigation into forced labor in supply chains that touch on China. Lawmakers said the report drew on responses submitted to the committee by Temu, as well as fast fashion retailer Shein, Nike and Adidas.
The report offered a particularly scathing assessment of Temu, saying there was an “extremely high risk that Temu’s supply chains are contaminated with forced labor.” The site advertises itself under the tagline “shop like a billionaire” and is now the second-most downloaded app in the Apple store.
Lawmakers also criticized Shein’s use of an importing method that allows companies to bring products into the United States duty-free and with less scrutiny from customs, as long as packages are sent directly to consumers and valued at under $800. Some lawmakers have been pushing to close off this shipping channel, which is called de minimis, for companies shipping goods from China.
Lawmakers said they were troubled by what the bipartisan committee’s investigation had uncovered so far.
“Temu is doing next to nothing to keep its supply chains free from slave labor,” said Representative Mike Gallagher, a Wisconsin Republican who heads the committee. “At the same time, Temu and Shein are building empires around the de minimis loophole in our import rules: dodging import taxes and evading scrutiny on the millions of goods they sell to Americans.”
Temu, which began operating in the United States last September, told the committee that it now brings millions of shipments into the United States annually through a network of more than 80,000 suppliers who sell directly from Chinese factories to U.S. consumers. The site sells clothing, temporary tattoos, modeling clay, electronics and other items directly to consumers for low prices, like $3 for a baby romper, $6 for sandals and $8 for a vacuum.
The report also contained new data indicating that Temu and Shein make heavy use of the de minimis rule. The shipping method allows retailers to sell their goods to consumers at cheaper prices, since they are not subject to duties, taxes or government fees, unlike traditional retailers that typically ship overseas goods in bulk.
De minimis shipping also requires far less information to be disclosed about the products and the companies involved in the transaction, making it harder for U.S. customs officials to detect packages with narcotics, counterfeits and goods made with forced labor. The number of de minimis packages entering the United States has exploded in recent years, to 720 million in 2021, from 220 million in 2016.
Based on data submitted by the companies, the report said that Temu and Shein alone are likely responsible for almost 600,000 packages shipped to the United States daily under the de minimis rule.
At an annualized rate, those shipments would represent more than 30 percent of the global de minimis shipments to the United States last year, and nearly half of such packages coming in from China, the report said.
Both Shein and Temu have steadily taken market share from U.S. brick-and-mortar retailers and won over younger consumers by investing in sophisticated e-commerce technology and offering hundreds more new products than competitors. Among teenagers, Shein was the third most popular e-commerce site behind Amazon and Nike, according to a Piper Sandler report issued this spring.
As their popularity has grown, so has congressional scrutiny of the firms given their ties to China. Shein was originally based in China but has moved its headquarters to Singapore. Temu, which is based in Boston, is a subsidiary of PDD Holdings, which moved its headquarters to Ireland from China this year.
Lawmakers have been questioning their relationship with China’s government and the Communist Party, as well as the companies’ ability to vet their supply chains to ensure they don’t contain materials or products that come from Xinjiang. Last year, the U.S. imposed a ban on products from Xinjiang, citing the region’s use of forced labor in factories and mines.
The Chinese government has carried out a crackdown in Xinjiang on Uyghurs and other ethnic minorities, including the organized use of forced labor to pick cotton; work in mines; and manufacture electronics, polysilicon and car parts. Because of this, the U.S. government now presumes all materials from the region to be made with forced labor unless proven otherwise.
Shein has previously said that it has zero tolerance for forced labor, does not source cotton from Xinjiang and fully complies with all U.S. tax and trade laws. An investigation by Bloomberg News last November found that some Shein clothing had been made with cotton from Xinjiang, according to laboratory tests. Shein didn’t dispute Bloomberg’s test results, but said in a statement to Bloomberg that it takes steps in all global markets to comply with local laws, and that it had engaged another lab, Oritain, to test its materials.
The congressional report also criticized Temu’s failure to set up a compliance or auditing system that could independently verify that its sellers are not sourcing products from Xinjiang.
Temu told the committee it has a reporting system that consumers and sellers can use to file complaints, and that it asks its sellers to sign a code of conduct specifying a “zero-tolerance policy” for the use of forced, indentured or penal labor. But the code of conduct does not mention Xinjiang or the U.S. ban, and Temu told the House committee that it does not prohibit vendors from selling products made in Xinjiang, the report said.
Temu also argued that its use of direct shipping to consumers meant that the U.S. consumer, not Temu, would bear the ultimate responsibility for adhering to the ban on Xinjiang goods.
“Temu is not the importer of record with respect to goods shipped to the United States,” the report quoted it as saying.
The committee report also pictured a key chain that was listed on Temu’s website this month and labeled “pendant with Xinjiang cotton.”
The key chain itself is shaped like a bud of cotton, and the report said that the Xinjiang label “may refer to the materials, the supplier, the pattern or the origin of the product.” It added that Temu’s “policy to not prohibit the sale of products that explicitly advertise their Xinjiang origins, even in the face of mounting congressional and public scrutiny on related topics, raises serious questions.”
The New York Times was not able to independently verify whether the product is made using Xinjiang cotton, which is barred under U.S. law. Checks by The Times found an identical product listed for sale on a Chinese wholesale site that was described as manufactured in Henan province, outside of Xinjiang.
Jordyn Holman contributed reporting.
Ana Swanson is based in the Washington bureau and covers trade and international economics for The Times. She previously worked at The Washington Post, where she wrote about trade, the Federal Reserve and the economy. @AnaSwanson
Claire Fu covers news in mainland China for The New York Times in Seoul. @fu_claire
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