Clothing Companies Cashing in on Countries in Crisis. Like any wicked problem there is no clear cut solution. Especially now that most these countries

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McStudent 1 Student McStudent Matthew Schmidgall WR 121 1 June 2016 Clothing Companies Cashing in on Countries in Crisis Clothing industries are banking off of workers put in devastated economic circumstances. The workers affected are subjected to poor working conditions that can and have ended in death. Like any wicked problem there is no clear cut solution. Especially now that most these countries economies and families now depend on these American clothing industries. By continuing to not do much for their outsourced workers the United States is promoting the abuse of human rights by allowing garment industries to continue these practices. The complexity of the unethical treatment clothing companies have caused to third world countries needs to be addressed and the industries need to give their employees better working conditions. The US stands legally with sweatshops where it did in the early to mid-1900s: they re bad, but just here. Outsourcing work to countries where sweatshops are acceptable is fine however. Paying them incredibly low wages is just as acceptable as well. According to the National Labor Committee, in El Salvador, Hermosa factory workers are sewing together $140 t- shirts, for a wage of 60 cents per hour for nineteen - almost twenty hours. The hours are gruesome and the pay is jaw dropping low. This is borderline slavery here. These families can t afford not to work in these conditions and they need whatever income they can get. If given the options to either eat a little or starve to death; most are going to choose to eat. The majority of sweatshop workers in developing countries, are suffering from the impacts of economic devastation. Meaning, that they have no real choice but to endure the long hours and low pay, if

McStudent 2 they want to continue living. For example, in the NPR, All Things Considered, broadcast: Two Sisters, A Small Room and the World behind a T-Shirt, Host Zoe Chace, Byline, travels to Bangladesh, (whose workers are, according to Chace, lowest paid in the world for this profession ) where she meets two sisters. Both sisters work in a sweatshop, in order to support their families. They also had three other siblings, whom tragically all passed before the age of seven, because the family could not afford to provide them with proper medical treatment. The youngest recalls growing up stating, We eat three times. But sometimes our parents are not eating because the lack of food. Minu, the oldest, now has her own daughter and wants to do right by her. These are only two of the hundreds of thousands of lives affected by American clothing companies. These are not just jobs, but a means of a better future. Admittedly, this is where sweatshops could be argued for being beneficial. Sisters Shumi and Minu are doing fairly well compared to when they were younger their parents could barely afford to feed themselves and their 3 daughters. Their financial and longevity status changed when the garment industry started hiring females and were able to find jobs, and ever since then they have been able to send money (however little) to their parents while providing for themselves. Life has changed for Shumi and Minu should be enough to show you how the garment industries is changing the economy in Bangladesh. Moreover, according to a women representing one of these countries that the garment industry is in during an interview with John Stossel, a reporter from 20/20, she states that her opinion by saying I wish they would have more sweatshops quote unquote in my countries. She shows that the way in which we look at these factories is far different than the way that they look at the factories. People in places like Bangladesh, or Vietnam they see places like clothing factories as opportunities, opportunities that give them the chance to live. A man, from the same 20/20 interview, that works in the

McStudent 3 factories has even said I wish these people would think with their brain not their heart, nobody in my country thinks of these factories as sweatshops. They even state that they want these jobs, and for people to stop trying to take their jobs away. So, people in sweatshops get paid very little for doing a great deal of work, which some don t seem to mind still they d appreciate more money right? But the economics isn't that quite simple. Paying them more is not a viable solution. Having American companies paying higher wages is the obvious go to option here, but it s not that simple. See Pierre Lemieux, an economist, in his article Defending Sweatshops argued that Imposing a minimum wage in sweatshops will create unemployment if the producer cannot adjust other margins--by reducing safety, for example. A mandated improvement in working conditions or other benefits amounts to the same outcome if the money wage is not reduced accordingly. The money has got to come from somewhere else. The money spent on safety is well needed. Granted, that these American clothing companies are supporting people who need stable incomes, it is inarguable that the work is dangerous, and an abuse of their human rights. This line of work is undoubtedly dangerous. The Rana Plaza was a garment factory that sewn together clothes for American citizens, made possible by American corporations. The Rana Plaza Collapsed killing 1,129 persons, and injuring 2,515 people. In the article Survivor of Bangladesh factory collapse speaks out by Holly Williams, young Rana Plaza survivor, Tahmina Akhter Sadia, states "I didn't want to go into the factory that morning," she said, "Because I'd already seen cracks in the walls. But the supervisor slapped my face and forced me to go inside." When she went to work that morning she refused to go in as cracks in the floor, and walls could clearly be seen, but after ignoring the her explanation of their refusal to enter the

McStudent 4 buildings the supervisor slapped them and forced the her to go in work. Later that day Rana Plaza Collapsed. Few Americans are even aware to this tragedy, and how easily it could ve been prevented; if only the clothing corporations did their part, and kept a better eye (if any eye at all) on the working conditions. The families of the victims were supposed to receive money as a type of reimbursement. However, according to, Human Rights Watch in 2014, a complete year after the Rana Plaza collapse, of the fifteen international clothing corporations, not a single one donated to financial trust fund. Of the corporations were Ascena Retail, The Cato Corporation, and J.C. Penney. All of which are American owned. Now, compare this to the early 20th century US. In New York City, 1911 March 25, a fire broke out in the Triangle Shirtwaist clothing factory. According to the Term Paper Resource Guide to Twentieth-Century United States History a book written by, he reports about the building No fire escapes existed, and the doors of this upper floor factory had been closed from the outside to keep employees from taking work breaks. As a result, 146 workers, most of them young immigrant women, perished from the fire itself or from jumping from windows. Following this tragedy, New York and other states enacted stricter codes for worker safety. Such conditions caused these hundred lives to be taken and the people did not stand for it. A clear abuse of human rights and certain laws needed to be implemented that would compensate workers and reprimand employers if such a scenario should arise. In the article, How the Triangle Shirtwaist Fire Changed workers' rights by Karen Bilodeau, an attorney who focuses her practice on workers compensation, she informs that Shortly after the tragedy, reformers staged a mass meeting at the Metropolitan Opera House, where they generated a petition calling for the creation of an investigation commission. Bilodeau goes on stating, The Commission

McStudent 5 was given broad discretion in the investigation of fire hazards, as well as other factory conditions that adversely affected workers' welfare. The reports generated by the Commission led to the passage of numerous bills regarding fire prevention, child labor and hour limitations. The Commission passed 36 laws in a period of just three years and as such, the period following the Triangle fire was often referred to as the golden era of remedial factory legislation. A tragedy happened at the Triangle shirtwaist factory and took 146 lives. Following that even laws and regulations were put in place to make sure workers employed by American companies in America would have the right to work in a safe place. If measures were not met up to code then the workers or their families were allowed compensation. Yet, what about those families in Bangladesh? Why do we as a nation seem to be ignoring the injustices overseas even when we are incredibly intertwined into these incidents? It s clear it is clear that the garment industry has helped these places, and pulling out of these countries would cause their slowly but steadily growing economies to plummet. They cannot just pull out these countries because we say that their living conditions are bad, they need to think of what the garment factories are doing for people of these countries. At the same time it s also clear that one cannot deny that the people that the garment industries look for to make their items are usually people/countries that are facing poverty and they do pay them way less than they would pay the average American. One cannot deny that the conditions of work in these places are upsettingly dangerous and unacceptable for human beings. One cannot deny that these American companies are exploiting these situations the people of these countries are in. For all those reasons, American companies need to provide what is suitable for work spaces as if in America. Otherwise they have no place anywhere else.

McStudent 6 Works Cited Bangladesh: Rana Plaza Victims Urgently Need Assistance. Human Rights Watch, 17 Apr.2015,www.hrw.org/news/2014/04/23/bangladesh-rana-plaza-victims-urgently-needassistance. Accessed 15 June 2017. Lemieux, Pierre. "Defending sweatshops." Regulation, vol. 38, no. 2, 2015, p. 66+. Academic OneFile, proxy.chemeketa.edu Muccigrosso, Robert, et al. Term paper resource guide to twentieth-century United States history. Westport, CT, Greenwood Press, 1999. "Open Letter from Adidas to El Salvador." www.globallabourrights.org. Web. 28 Apr. 2016. "The Bangladesh Factory Collapse One Year Later." CBSNews. CBS Interactive. Web. 28 Apr. 2016. "Two Sisters, A Small Room And the World Behind A T-Shirt." Audio blog post. NPR: Oregon Public Broadcasting. NPR, 2 Dec. 2013. Web. Stossel, John. Benefits of Sweatshops. 20/20, ABC News, 10 Oct. 2003. Williams, Holly. "Survivor of Bangladesh factory collapse speaks out - CBS News." N.p., n.d. Web. 15 June 2017.