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Artikel

17 Mär 2021

Autor:
Naimul Karim, Reuters

Pay Your Workers Campaign calls on fashion brands and retailers to fix broken industry and commit to paying workers

"Fashion brands urged to fix 'broken' industry with pledge on workers' pay", 15 March 2021

Fashion brands should fix their “broken industry” by ensuring millions of pandemic-hit workers receive their full wages and by guaranteeing severance pay if jobs are cut, a coalition of more than 200 rights groups said on Monday.

The #PayYourWorkers campaign said brands and retailers that made a profit in 2020 - like Nike, Amazon and Next - could stop garment workers “going hungry” and set up a severance fund by paying manufacturers the equivalent of $0.10 more per t-shirt.

“This is the minimum brands should do on the way to the living wages which must become the standard of a post-pandemic recovery,” said Ineke Zeldenrust from the Clean Clothes Campaign, a coalition member...

Fashion companies cancelled orders worth billions of dollars in the first three months of the pandemic as COVID-19 shuttered stores worldwide, leading to wage losses estimated at at least $3.2 billion.

While orders picked up in the second half of 2020, some Western brands demanded price cuts and delayed payments to suppliers desperate for any orders to survive, campaigners said.

About 60 million people work in the textile, clothing and footwear sector globally and industry experts say falling sales have left workers, many of whom either lost their jobs or are being paid less than before, vulnerable to exploitation.

Nearly 10,000 workers from eight factories supplying to 16 fashion brands, which made a total of $10 billion in profit last year, are still owed wages, rights group the Business & Human Rights Resource Centre said in a study last week.

The coalition, which called on brands to publicly announce their support for its appeal, is made up of groups from 40 nations - including garment-producing nations such as Bangladesh and Cambodia - and international organisations like Oxfam.

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