Garment workers supplying global fashion brands have been underpaid or not paid at all during the coronavirus crisis, with lost wages potentially amounting to nearly $6 billion, researchers said.
With the pandemic leading to store closures and falling sales, many retailers cancelled orders or demanded discounts from suppliers, jeopardising the livelihoods of tens of millions of workers in the sector.
Pressure group Clean Clothes Campaign, a network of labour rights organisations and unions, said garment workers in South and Southeast Asia, many already surviving on "poverty pay", had only received three fifths of their regular income on average from March to May. In some regions of India, workers received less than half their income, according to the group's report "Un(der)paid in the pandemic".
"The wage gaps caused by the crisis mean that workers are not able to feed their families properly," Khalid Mahmood, director of the Labour Education Foundation in Pakistan, said in a statement. "They are not able to pay for school fees...or pay for medical expenses and...many of them are in debt."
The situation was probably no better in other low-wage regions.
Researchers estimated garment workers worldwide had lost $3.19 billion to $5.79 billion in the first three months of the pandemic. They estimated $500 million in wages had been withheld in Bangladesh and more than $400 million in Indonesia.
Bangladeshi seamstress Shorifa Begum, 25, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation she was sacked by text message in May after fellow workers protested over unpaid wages. Begum, whose husband is too ill to work, said her former boss owed her 60,000 taka ($708), mostly in unpaid overtime – a sum equivalent to more than a third of her annual income.
"I've been living on loans since May. I owe money for rice and lentils to many shops and I don't know when I can pay them back," she said, adding she could often no longer afford milk for her toddler. In desperation, Begum is joining another factory paying 6,000 taka a month - less than half what she used to be paid after overtime. "It obviously won't be enough, but I need to survive," she said.
Clean Clothes Campaign said clothing companies had long profited from low wages in countries with lax labour laws. "We are asking brands individually to make a public commitment to avoid a situation in which everyone in a supply chain has responsibility, but in practice nobody assumes responsibility," said Clean Clothes campaigner Christie Miedema.
https://news.trust.org/item/20200810153357-f21tz/
With the pandemic leading to store closures and falling sales, many retailers cancelled orders or demanded discounts from suppliers, jeopardising the livelihoods of tens of millions of workers in the sector.
Pressure group Clean Clothes Campaign, a network of labour rights organisations and unions, said garment workers in South and Southeast Asia, many already surviving on "poverty pay", had only received three fifths of their regular income on average from March to May. In some regions of India, workers received less than half their income, according to the group's report "Un(der)paid in the pandemic".
"The wage gaps caused by the crisis mean that workers are not able to feed their families properly," Khalid Mahmood, director of the Labour Education Foundation in Pakistan, said in a statement. "They are not able to pay for school fees...or pay for medical expenses and...many of them are in debt."
The situation was probably no better in other low-wage regions.
Researchers estimated garment workers worldwide had lost $3.19 billion to $5.79 billion in the first three months of the pandemic. They estimated $500 million in wages had been withheld in Bangladesh and more than $400 million in Indonesia.
Bangladeshi seamstress Shorifa Begum, 25, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation she was sacked by text message in May after fellow workers protested over unpaid wages. Begum, whose husband is too ill to work, said her former boss owed her 60,000 taka ($708), mostly in unpaid overtime – a sum equivalent to more than a third of her annual income.
"I've been living on loans since May. I owe money for rice and lentils to many shops and I don't know when I can pay them back," she said, adding she could often no longer afford milk for her toddler. In desperation, Begum is joining another factory paying 6,000 taka a month - less than half what she used to be paid after overtime. "It obviously won't be enough, but I need to survive," she said.
Clean Clothes Campaign said clothing companies had long profited from low wages in countries with lax labour laws. "We are asking brands individually to make a public commitment to avoid a situation in which everyone in a supply chain has responsibility, but in practice nobody assumes responsibility," said Clean Clothes campaigner Christie Miedema.
https://news.trust.org/item/20200810153357-f21tz/
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