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FT.com site : The false dilemma of the sweatshop.
FTCOM00020060725e27o0002d
Christian Barry and Sanjay Reddy
24 July 2006
Financial Times (FT.Com)
English
(c) 2006 The Financial Times Limited. All rights reserved
In 1910, Thomas Dawley, the US government inspector, recorded this testimony as part of his investigation of labour practices in the
American south: "You people from the north do not know anything about
the poor people of the south. A few of you have stumbled into our
cotton-mill villages and have seen some of the conditions among the
poor in them, think they are bad, but it is nothing to what you may
see in the country."
He summed up his case against well-meaning but, in his view,
misguided child-labour abolitionists: "We are often led blindly by
propaganda, which i n its inception may have a good cause to sustain,
but blinds even those who have eyes to see and hearts to feel, and
who honestly desire to lift the fallen, strengthen the weak,
alleviate suffering and at least leave the world better than they found it."
We find similar proclamations today in the global context. "Anyone
who cares about fighting poverty," Nicolas Kristof explained in The
New York Times last month, "should campaign in favour of sweatshops,
demanding that companies set up factories in Africa." Such critics
seek similarly to persuade us that workplaces in which workers may be
put at great risk, paid very low wages and subjected to physical
intimidation or sexual harassment are tickets out of poverty for the global poor.
As in the child labour debate in the US a hundred years ago, critics like Mr Kristof present us with a dilemma: either continue to benefit
from and accept these wages and poor working conditions or - if we cease to buy products produced in such a manner - jeopardise
millions of people's livelihoods. They argue that instead of seeking improvements in working conditions and wages in poor countries, we
ought to encourage the establishment of work places that provide
workers with the jobs that they desire, however poor the conditions of employment.
This modern-day dilemma is just as false as that presented by Dawley
in the early 20th century. Poorer countries can avoid a trade-off
between enhancing labour standards and taking full advantage of
job-creating production and trading opportunities if current
international trade rules are reformed so that they reward instead of
punish countries that improve labour standards.
Defenders of the status quo are concerned that improved labour
standards will raise the cost of production, leading countries that
implement them to become less attractive locations for export-oriented production.
Under present international trade rules, companies can profit by
choosing to operate in a country in which labour standards are more
lax, or are un-enforced.
Such diversion of trade and investment would not occur if global
trading rules instead rewarded countries that promote labour
standards by offering them additional access to export markets in
rich countries and by providin g them with financial assistance that
could be used to neutralise the cost- raising effects of
worker-friendly reforms (through measures such as wage subsidies paid
to employers that improve labour standards). The competition between
poorer countries to attract trade and investment by lowering labour standards can be diminished.
What about the competition between richer and poorer countries? Even
if improvements in labour standards raise labour costs in poorer
countries, these costs will remain much lower than in rich countries
and there will be a strong incentive to manufacture in poorer
countries and to trade with them. A poorer country that improves
labour standards can remain an attractive site for export-oriented
production, especially if other poorer countries simultaneously improve labour standards.
The global trading system should be designed in a manner that
recognises the limited resources and enforcement powers of
governments in poorer countries and that respects relevant
differences in priorities and social norms. It should tailor
expectations concerning labour standards to the level of development of each country so as to promote workers'
interests without setting expectations that are unreasonably high.
Countries that are indifferent to the most egregious and systematic
violations of basic labour standards should be isolated within the
world trading system. Such countries (whether they are sites of
production or of registration, ownership or management of companies
engaged in such
violations) should be denied the preferential trading opportunities
and other benefits accorded to countries that seek to promote workers'
interests.
New worker-friendly rules for international trade can provide
powerful assistance to workers in poor countries. Those who care
about fighting poverty and exploitation should stop cheering for
sweatshops and help in the struggle to make worker-friendly rules for
international trade a reality.
Christian Barry is editor of Ethics & International Affairs. Sanjay
Reddy is assistant professor in the Department of Economics at
Barnard Coll ege and the School of International and Public Affairs,
Columbia University. Their book on international trade and labour
standards will be published by Columbia University Press in 2007
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