Discounting Lives to Maximize Profits
by WALTER BRASCH
Imitating Sgt. Schultz of “Hogan’s
Heroes,” Walmart executives claimed they knew nothing—NOTHING—about working conditions in a
garment factory in Bangladesh where 112 workers died and more than 150 were
injured in a fire.
Tazreen Fashions made Walmart’s
Faded Glory brand clothes, as well as clothes for Sears and other dozens of
other major retailers. Walmart officials told the news media they had previously
terminated Tazreen as a direct supplier because of concerns about fire hazards,
but that another supplier had subcontracted the work to Tazreen. Walmart refused
to identify the supplier. In an official statement, Walmart said that the fire
was “extremely troubling to us, and we will continue to work with the apparel
industry to improve fire safety education and training in Bangladesh.”
News reports indicate that
survivors said fire extinguishers didn’t work, exit doors were locked, and there
were no emergency exits. The AP reports that most fire extinguishers were not
used, the workers having no knowledge of how to use them. According to the AP,
most of the workers, about 70 percent of them women, were from the poorest
sections of Bangladesh. More than 700 workers have died since 2005 from fires in
the Bangladesh’s growing clothing manufacturing industry, according to the
International Labor reporting Forum.
As with the Triangle Shirtwaist
factory fire in New York in 1911, where 146 women, most of them recent Jewish
and Italian immigrants working in sweatshop conditions, the workers at Tazreen
were burned alive trying to get through the doors that never opened, died from
smoke inhalation, or jumped to their deaths. Many of the dead in both fires were
buried in unmarked graves, their bodies unrecognizable. The Triangle fire
eventually led to improved safety conditions and the rise of the International
Ladies Garment Workers Union to protect workers from management callousness.
Walmart has a fierce anti-union
policy for its own stores and employees, but doesn’t say much about working
conditions in companies that supply merchandise, nor does it actively oppose
unions in other companies overseas. There is no organized representation for
most of the workers in Bangladesh sweatshops. Most workers earn $8.50 to $12.50
for a 48 hour work week, with mandatory overtime that can push them to as many
as 80 hours. They receive two or three days off in a month. If Americans wonder
why their clothes may not be as good as American-made clothes produced in union
shops, the answer could be that the workers in Bangladesh may be mentally and
physically fatigued, and that multinational corporations pressure suppliers to
cut costs on material and labor. Bangladesh, now competing with China, shipped
about $18 billion worth of merchandise to American and European corporations
last year.
About 40 percent of all
merchandise sold by Walmart is produced by contracts with manufacturers (most
overseas), where low wages, excessive work hours, and poor working conditions
are accepted practice. Walmart doesn’t make public the names of the companies
which produce those “low prices” merchandise. However, it is known that it has
contracts with several Bangladesh companies, as well as more than 20,000 Chinese
manufacturers.
With revenue of more than $447 billion a year and about a 25 percent profit, Walmart is the largest public company in income in the world. But with its “low prices” slogan comes significant risk.
Walmart and other corporations
have pushed American suppliers to outsource their own merchandise to overseas
suppliers. More than 3.3 million American jobs will have been outsourced by
2015, according to the U.S. Department of Labor. However, Goldman Sachs projects
that as many as seven million jobs will have been lost by 2014. Most are in
clothing and computer/electronics manufacturing, and in service centers where
American customers call “help” lines and often get a heavily-accented
representative who says his name is “Sam.” What most politicians, business
people, and the public don’t understand is there is a direct correlation between
the number of jobs outsourced and high unemployment in the
U.S.
Walmart, which originally
established a “Buy American” slogan before strutting its “lower prices”
philosophy, now claims that over half its merchandise is made in America. This
may or may not be accurate—Walmart doesn’t give specifics. But, if accurate,
most of that is from its expanded grocery stores. Clothing, electronics,
household goods, and thousands of other products are still made overseas—usually
in conditions that are, at best, sweatshops; at worst, death traps. Every
Congressional bill to ban the import of products produced in sweatshop
conditions has been smothered in the committee process.
It’s possible that Walmart
executives and upper management of the 2.2 million employee corporation that has
eyes in almost every spot of the world did not know about working conditions in
Tazreen—or any of the other sweatshops in Asia. It’s also possible they did
know, but did a PR shuffle to explain their indifference. It really doesn’t
matter.
The sweatshops allow the
corporations to sell the cheap merchandise that results in higher return on
investment for American corporations that rely upon American consumers who want
cheap merchandise, and don’t seem to care where it comes from or how it’s
produced.
But, even those Americans who do
care, and would pay higher prices for merchandise produced by workers in
unionized American manufacturing plants, usually don’t have a choice. It’s hard
to find “Made in America” labels on clothes and numerous other products sold by
major retailers that have largely ignored sweatshop conditions in order to
maximize profit.
[Walter Brasch’s latest book is Before the First Snow, which looks at
working conditions. Assisting on this column was Rosemary R.
Brasch]
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Walter M. Brasch, Ph.D.
Latest Book: Before the First Snow: Stories from the Revolution
(www.greeleyandstone.com)
www.walterbrasch.com
www.walterbrasch.blogspot.com
www.facebook.com/walterbrasch
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6cC4zHnFAY
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Walter M. Brasch, Ph.D.
Latest Book: Before the First Snow: Stories from the Revolution
(www.greeleyandstone.com)
www.walterbrasch.com
www.walterbrasch.blogspot.com
www.facebook.com/walterbrasch
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E6cC4zHnFAY
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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