Times are tough. Customers demand the cheapest possible
clothes. How can you sell jeans for £5.99? Easy … pay people 23p an hour to
make them. Being able to charge £12 less than a similar pair of jeans in Tesco is
not magic and doesn’t require any business wizards to do. A young woman in a
factory in Bangladesh is paid as little as 2p for every pair she makes. In
Bangladesh the minimum legal wage for a garment worker is 23p an hour.
A breakdown of costs at a Bangladeshi jeans factory
published by Bloomberg in 2013 priced a zip at 10p, a button at 4p and rivets
at 1p each. Embroidery added another 9p, the pockets 6p and the labels 7p. At
these margins, every single penny counts, so it is no surprise to find that the
Lidl “jeans”are pared back to the bone. The headline-grabbing £5.99 “jeans” are
actually a pair of “jeggings” – tight-fitting leggings that resemble jeans. The
label says they have a “stylish denim effect”. Cotton-rich fabric (77%), with
an elasticated waistband; they have a single button, a YKK zip, two back
pockets and two at the front, held together with stitching, no rivets. There is
no embroidery on the pockets. The Boyfriend Jeans, at £7.99, appear to be the
real thing: four pockets plus that baffling little one inside the front pocket
on the right of the body (it is a watch pocket, apparently). There are six belt
loops, five rivets, three buttons and a YKK zip. And they are made from 100%
cotton, the material being the most expensive element of the production
process: in the range of £2.30 to £2.50. There is thread to pay for too, for
the stitching, which might be as much as 19p, and the finished pair will need
to be washed, so if we are going to try to put a price on the materials we are
probably looking around the £3.90 mark.
Now we need to assemble those materials. Luckily – for the
buyer – that is not nearly as expensive. Most of the workers in Bangladeshi
garment factories are women and most are paid at the minimum legal wage of
5,300 takas a month (about £48). That is 23p an hour on an eight-hour, six-day,
week. It is a fifth of the £230 a month estimated by the Asia Floor Wage
Alliance to be the minimum required for a living wage back in 2013.
To accurately work out the labour cost, you need to know how
many pairs of jeans the factory turns out a day. The available figures cover
quite a broad range: research in India found workers in one factory averaging
20 pairs a day, while a different study in Tunisia found 33 pairs a day. It all
depends on the quality and complexity of the design. In 2010 the Institute for
Global Labour and Human Rights looked at Bangladesh and found a team of 25
workers turning out 250 pairs of jeans an hour – 10 per worker, or 80 per
worker per day. That means a minimum wage worker would be paid somewhere in a
range between 2p and 9p for each pair of jeans they make, which is broadly in
line with a 2011 study of Bangladeshi garment manufacture by the US consultancy
O’Rourke Group Partners, which priced the labour costs for a polo shirt at 8p. O’Rourke
put the total factory costs per shirt at 41p: Bloomberg calculated its
Bangladeshi jeans cost the factory 56p to make, and the factory added on 16p in
profit.
Splitting the difference, we are now up to about £4.50. But
we still need to ship the jeans, and there are warehouse charges and port fees,
so we can stick on another 30p, taking us up to £4.80. And we still need to get
them from the port to the store, so that’s another 50p. That gives us £5.30,
but there is still VAT to go on top. The grand total of £6.36 would bust the
budget for the jeggings, but they use a little less material, and we have saved
a few pennies on the buttons and rivets. That will make them quicker to turn
out, so that is a bit off the labour costs. It might just about be possible to
bring them in at £5.99 or they may be a loss leader: that happens. The jeans,
meanwhile, are showing a profit of £1.63.
But this is where Lidl’s purchasing power has to kick in,
because both the jeggings and the jeans are imported by middlemen, who sell on
to the supermarket – respectively OWIM Gmbh, a German company, and Hong
Kong-based Top Grade International Enterprise Ltd, which exports 30 million
pieces a year from Bangladesh. Both need to take their cut. In the Bloomberg
example, the middleman took a cut of £2. That is clearly out of the question
here if Lidl is to turn a profit itself. And that is the reality of a £5.99
pair of jeans: everyone is squeezed, all down the line.
Because when your business model is based on offering the
lowest possible prices, someone has to subsidise that, and that someone is the
worker stitching those jeans. Lidl does not buy its jeans from Bangladesh
because Dhaka’s factories are the finest in the world: it does so because they
pay their workers a pittance. And that, ultimately, is how it is possible to sell
a pair of jeans for £5.99. It’s not magic. It’s just exploitation.
Lidl racked up £4bn of sales in 2014. It meets a need and it
does so by putting the tightest possible squeeze on its suppliers. Lidl argues
that it is aware of its responsibilities and is working to improve the living
and working conditions of garment workers. It audits its factories, it says,
but everyone does. It does not publish the results. Hardly anyone does.
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