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Anti-Sweatshop
Movement Provides Needed
Counterweight
in the Global Economy
by
Mark Weisbrot
Dissident
Voice
November 6, 2003
Last
week Sean "P. Diddy" Combs became the latest celebrity to feel the
heat of the anti-sweatshop movement, as charges that his "Sean John"
T-shirts were being manufactured under inhumane conditions burst onto to the TV
news. Mr. Combs, whose latest hit "Shake Ya Tail Feather" with fellow
hip-hop stars Murphy Lee and Nelly has been shaking up the pop charts, denied
any knowledge that workers at the Choloma, Honduras factory that makes his
company's clothing were mistreated.
"I
want to make sure that any merchandise that has my name on it is made by
workers who are treated well," he told the press.
We
can take him at his word, but what to do? According to workers at the factory
and the U.S.-based National Labor Committee, the 380 employees lack basic
rights. Fourteen were fired for trying to organize a union, they say, and women
are dismissed if they are pregnant. They also complain of forced overtime and
being limited to only two bathroom breaks a day. Wages are between 65 and 98
cents and hour, which activists say comes to about 15 cents of labor costs for
a shirt that sells for $40 in New York.
This
problem of ruthlessly exploited sweatshop labor is worldwide, and has spawned
an international movement. Market research indicates that most Americans would
be willing to pay considerably more for clothing (28 percent more on a $10
item, according to one survey) that is manufactured under good conditions. But
their opportunity to do so has so far been limited.
And
according to many economists, that isn't necessarily bad. In response to the
anti-sweatshop movement that swept American campuses three years ago, 352
academics -- mostly economists -- sent a letter to university presidents. They
were concerned that the movement could force sweatshop wages so high that
"the net result would be shifts in employment that will worsen the
collective welfare of the very workers in poor countries who are supposed to be
helped."
In
other words, the jobs will leave. It is an argument that, unfortunately,
carries much more weight that it should. Aside from the fact that it hasn't
happened yet, this line of reasoning is flawed on other grounds. It is similar
to the arguments made against child labor legislation in the United States
nearly a century ago -- the families would be that much poorer if the children
could not work. Or the arguments against unions and higher wages that have been
used for the past two centuries: that these "interferences" in labor
markets will lead to unemployment.
The
United States was able to eliminate child labor, and to allow the vast majority
of the labor force to share -- until the late 1970s -- in the gains from
increasing productivity, because we changed our laws and allowed for collective
bargaining. It was a long struggle: the right to organize unions was not
recognized in Federal law until 1935, and even then it took sit-down strikes to
make it real. And this right has been vastly eroded again -- even in a
high-income, democratic society -- over the past 25 years.
The
problem is that there is no global nation-state that can establish such rights
for those who work for the global corporations that roam the globe seeking the
lowest labor costs. On the contrary, the most important global institutions --
the IMF, World Bank and the WTO -- have generally leaned in the other
direction, seeking reforms that favor the de-regulation of labor markets.
Workers throughout the world face a "race to the bottom" that has
maquiladoras in Mexico now leaving for cheaper, more severely repressed labor
in China. This is the logical consequence of negotiating ever more agreements
(e.g. NAFTA, the WTO) that create new rights and enforcement mechanisms for
international investors, but are brazenly silent regarding the rights of labor.
The
anti-sweatshop movement can't change all that by itself. But it can provide a
counterweight that helps establish new norms about what is acceptable, while
aiding workers who are fighting for their basic rights.
Mr.
Combs, who ran the New York City Marathon last weekend, now faces another
challenge that would allow him to lead by example. He could require that his
supplier recognize the union, reinstate the workers fired for organizing, and
concede to the workers' very modest demands on wages and working conditions.
And he could announce that other clothing manufacturers should do the same. Now
that would really shake some tail feathers.
Mark
Weisbrot is Co-Director of the Center for Economic and
Policy Research, a nonpartisan think-tank in the nation's capital (www.cepr.net).
Readers may write him at CEPR, 1621 Connecticut Ave NW, Suite 500, Washington,
DC 20009-1052 and e-mail him at Weisbrot@cepr.net
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