Disposable consumer goods at high human costs
By Julio Godoy
Our hunger for cheap goods often meant buying from companies that
produce them at the expense of workers’ welfare and the environment.
Hundreds of thousands around the world demonstrate for better working
conditions and fair wages on the International Labour Day. However, when
May 1 is over, many of these demonstrators go back to their daily
reckless consumption patterns, which consider practically all consumer
goods as disposable, and therefore support international corporations,
which exploit workers and poison the environment.
The garment industry is a most illustrative example of the follies of
modern-times consumerism: Take Bella, a German girl living near the city
of Bremen: Several times each year, Bella makes a shopping spree to a
local fashion store and comes back loaded with clothes.
The store Bella regularly visits belongs to Primark the Ireland-based
clothing retailer, which due to its aggressive price policies has become
a European leader in the sector. As Primark announces itself, it is
“Adored by fashion fans and value seekers alike (and) is widely
established as the destination store for keeping up with the latest
looks without breaking the bank.”
“Whatever I wear, I bought it at Primark’s,” Bella says, while
pointing at her body. “There, for less than 50 euros, I get a skirt, a
blouse, sunglasses, underwear, stockings, and shoes. Because the clothes
at Primark’s are so cheap, I don’t even need to wash them. I wear
everything once, and then I throw everything away.” Asked whether she is
aware of the human and environmental consequences of such behaviour,
Bella shrugs. “I do not know where and how Primark produces its
clothes,” she says.
Bella and her likes even publish frenetic video reports on the
so-called social media, from YouTube to Facebook, of their shopping
sprees in such fashion stores. Regular clients of such stores confess
that the shopping sprees are undeserving. “Most of the time, you even
have to fight with other clients to grab an item,” Bella admits.
Such consumer behaviour doubtless contributed to the catastrophe of
Rana Plaza, the Bangladesh building that housed several garment fabrics,
and which collapsed one year ago, on April 2013, killing more 1,134
textile workers, practically all of them women, and injuring up to 2,500
people.
After the catastrophe, remainders of clothes were found in the site,
which proved that numerous international fashion brands, from Benetton
to Yes Zee, had contracts with the garment factories operating there.
Last March, almost one year after the catastrophe, Primark officially
admitted that one of its suppliers, New Wave Bottoms, operated in the
Rana Plaza building.
A typical worker at the Rana Plaza garment factories earned less than
38 euros per month, roughly 50 percent of what is an estimated living
wage for Bangladesh. Björn Weber, Frankfurt-based research and logistics
director at the Planet Retail counselling company, said at the time,
“The working conditions at the factories were catastrophic.” Operators
at the garment factories had to work 12 hours per day, seven days a
week, Weber added.
As Pope Francis, reacting to the news of the building’s collapse,
said, “This is slave labour… Not paying fairly… because you are only
looking at balance sheets, only looking at how to make a profit.”
It may well be that the clothes Bella regularly bought at Primark’s
in Bremen, were manufactured by Rehana Khatun, a Bangladeshi girl of
roughly the German girl’s age. Rehana, who used to work as a seamstress
at one of the numerous garment factories of Rana Plaza, lost her legs
during the catastrophe, and will be handicapped for the rest of her
life.
Deadliest
The collapse of the Rana Plaza building was the deadliest
garment-factory accident in history. According to the Bangladesh Fire
Service and Civil Defence, the upper four floors, which housed the
factories, were built without a permit.
Despite evidence that the structure of the Rana Plaza was severely
damaged, and that banks and other businesses located in the lower floors
of the building had closed for fear of a collapse, the garment factories
continued operating.
The disaster moved the Bangladesh government, in cooperation with
employers’ and workers’ lobby groups, and with the support of
international organisations, such as the International Labour
Organisation (ILO), to draw a plan of action which includes building and
fire safety assessments, labour inspections, and occupational safety and
health, rehabilitation and skills training for survivors.
Additionally, a compensation fund was set up, through which the
international corporations that contracted with the garment factories
operating in the building would indemnify the families of the victims of
the catastrophe. The fund was supposed to collect about 40 million U.S.
dollars to compensate the more than 3,000 workers injured or the
families of those killed.
However, according to official figures as of April 24, 2014, only
half of the brands involved in the catastrophe have contributed or
promised to contribute about 16 million U.S. dollars to the fund.
In March 2014, almost one year after the catastrophe, Primark
announced that it would immediately “begin making long-term payments to
the 580 workers (or their dependents) of (our) supplier, New Wave
Bottoms, which occupied the second floor of the eight storey building,
who died, or were injured as a result of the Rana Plaza building
collapse in Bangladesh.”
The payment, Primark added, will be met in full, in cash, and will
amount to some 9 million U.S. dollars.
Primark also announced a new campaign to “to reduce the environmental
impact of manufacturing processes.” To that end, last February, Primark
committed “to work with industry and stakeholders including (the
non-governmental environmental organisation) Greenpeace to ban the use
of all hazardous chemicals from the supply chain.”
But another NGO, Clean Clothes Campaign, which advocates the
improvement of working conditions and supporting the empowerment of
workers in the global garment and sportswear industries, complains that
many international fashion brands have so far failed to publicly commit
to the fund, “despite having links to the factories in the building.”
These brands are Adler Modemaerkte, Grabalok (Store 21), Manifattura
Corona, Ascena Retail, Gueldenpfennig, Matalan, Auchan, Iconix (Lee
Cooper), NKD, Benetton, J C Penney, PWT (Texman), Carrefour, KANZ/ Kids
Fashion Group, Yes Zee, and Cato Fashions.
Dictatorship
Questions of compensations and safety measures could be avoided if
consumers across the world did not ignore the ethical consequences of
their “fashion addiction”, labour experts and social scientists say.
Hubertus Thiermeyer, leader of the trade section at the German Ver.di
union, says:”When you buy a t-shirt for less than two euros, you must be
aware that somebody else in the world is paying a huge share of the
labour and environmental costs you don’t care to own.”
– Third World Network Features.
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