Kristof's overdue fisking
Yesterday's Kristof editorial in the New York Times is why I decided blogging was OK. I will let others shred his sniveling style, and attempt to focus on the man's argument. If you're short on time, it reduces to him saying
For a racy lede, Kristof ignores (or is unaware) that several countries of subsaharan Africa already have a textile industry, due in part to Clinton's African Growth and Opportunity Act, which allowed duty-free imports of African textiles to the US -- and which Kristof tosses in later without context.
He ignores or doesn't understand that African apparel factories exist, are failing quickly, and will never reopen, because of the Multi-Fibre Arrangement's expiration last year. The MFA was a global quota on textile imports worked out among rich countries to throw a little development around poor countries and bind them to Western markets, all the while restricting their access to protect domestic producers and control the South's development.
Its expiration allowed countries with supremely low costs and exploitative working conditions, i.e.
Mr. Shaanika and the other young men noted that the construction jobs were dangerous and arduous, and that they would vastly prefer steady jobs in, yes, sweatshops.
Sweatshop jobs are anything but steady. Sweatshops are notoriously unstable, because the global brands that produce apparel constantly hunt for countries and factories that will shave cents off the production price. The prices brands pay for apparel drop every year. Brands do not renew contracts unless factory owners agree to these vicious prices, and if they do, workers' pay drops, or the benefits are chopped, or the leaky sewage pipe doesn't get repaired. And if the factory owner refuses the brand's price, the contract is cut, and the workers are fired. It's a chaotic industry because that suits the brands. One Department of Labor study of the
Imagine that a Nike vice president proposed manufacturing cheap T-shirts in
The boss would reply: ''You're crazy! We'd be boycotted on every campus in the country."
So companies like Nike, itself once a target of sweatshop critics, tend not to have highly labor-intensive factories in the very poorest countries, but rather more capital-intensive factories (in which machines do more of the work) in better-off nations like Malaysia or Indonesia. And the real losers are the world's poorest people.
Apparently Kristof has little understanding of how capitalism works, and no comprehension of the arguments sweatshop campaigners make. Business decisions in the apparel world are made on price, quality and time to delivery.
Some of those who campaign against sweatshops respond to my arguments by noting that they aren't against factories in
One problem -- as the closure of the Namibian factories suggests -- is that it already isn't profitable to pay respectable salaries, and so any pressure to raise them becomes one more reason to avoid Africa altogether. Moreover, when Western companies do pay above-market wages, in places like
Studies of sweatshop wages suggest that workers receive from roughly 5 cents to 50 cents per piece, depending on season, country, factory ownership, type of garment and other conditions. Especially in apparel, because there is such a huge disconnect between cost of production and the price of the finished good, there is significant room for price flexibility. Wage studies say the average increase to allow workers to afford a local basket of goods would be more like doubling a 25 cent rate to 50 cents.
But regardless, Kristof inflated the amount sweatshop workers receive, and misdiagnoses why Namibian factories are closing. The problem is not that some people kill the "golden goose" by receiving non-starvation wages. The problem is the neoliberal scheme that allows unrestricted capital mobility and stifles labor mobility, pushes down wage, safety, health, development & other domestic laws around the world, and forces poor nations into competition with each other to produce the most perfect exploitation they can.
At base, Kristof is making an argument here against minimum wages, to which the only reply is: Then what's wrong with child labor? 80 hour weeks? Machines that sever limbs and crush skulls? Sicko.
If Western companies know about Cambodian wage theft and put to use their pretense of caring about their workers, the practice would be ridiculously easy to halt. But, thankfully, we don't have to rely on them. Cambodian workers are among the least exploited in the current apparel landscape because they boast one of the highest rates of unionized textile shops in the global South. Even if their local managers capture some of the wage premium now, they are the best positioned to challenge their managers.
The heart of the sweatshop problem is the unrelenting price demands and instability that brands force on factories and sweatshop workers. They will continue to play the apparel system in their favor until sweatshop workers, Western consumers and organizations between them make them stop.
One push needs to come from African countries themselves: a crackdown on corruption and red tape. But another useful step would be for American students to stop trying to ban sweatshops, and instead campaign to bring them to the most desperately poor countries.
American students aren't trying to ban sweatshops, and never have. They're attempting to create nodes of decently paid, unionized workers who can count on stable orders from US colleges and universities. By supporting successful, visible examples of high-road apparel production, and by strengthening the unions and NGOs who organize and support these workers and factories, they are working to spark organizing among the rest of the of sweatshop world. And the gross apologies for the servitude of millions of apparel workers by hand-wringing editorialists? Maybe those will never go away.
1 Comments:
this is hot, b. this is the kinda shit i've been wanting since you started a blog.
i've gotta say, i think that this kind of "liberals disciplining the too-far left" is really disgusting. like effing tod gitlin.
they act like everyone would think the same as them if only everyone else was as smart as they are. damn.
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