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DHAKA, Bangladesh—Tensions rose in Bangladesh's garment industry over
the weekend as factory owners and workers squared off over a new
minimum wage for the South Asian country's largest export industry.
Tens of thousands of garment workers took to the streets in the
capital of Dhaka on Saturday, demanding the government set minimum
monthly pay at 8,000 taka, or about $100. Today an unskilled
sewing-machine apprentice earns a minimum monthly wage of just 3,000
taka.
The factory-owners' association said a higher minimum wage could
hobble the industry as costs of other inputs to clothing production are
also rising, even as demand from many Western markets is weak.
Agence France-Presse/Getty Images
Bangladeshi garment workers protesting over wages in Dhaka Saturday.
Workers blocked a key highway leading
north out of Dhaka on Saturday and clashed with police, demanding
factories in the area be closed for the day to allow workers to attend
the Dhaka rally. Several people were injured, the police said.
Labor leaders at the rally held in central Dhaka rejected an offer
from the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association to
raise wages by just 20%.
Labor leader Sirajul Islam Rony, president of Bangladesh National
Garment Workers Employees League, said there could be more protests if
the workers' demands aren't met.
"The industry is the top foreign-currency earner in the country, but
the workers are not getting the benefits," Mr. Rony said. "If the owners
don't listen to our demands, there will be more unrest in the garment
sector."
Shahidullah Azim, vice president of the Bangladesh Garment
Manufacturers and Exporters Association, said the industry cannot afford
to more than double wages.
"We are facing many challenges. The buyers are driving down the
price. The cost of production is going up. Some of our traditional
markets in Europe and America are still struggling to come out of an
economic downturn," he said. "We must take care not to kill the goose
that lays the golden eggs."
In June, Bangladesh's Ministry of Labor and Employment formed a
committee with factory owners, workers and government representatives to
review wages in the garment sector. The committee is supposed to report
back with a negotiated solution by December.
Bangladesh's garment industry exported more than $20 billion of
clothes in the fiscal year ended June 30 and employs roughly four
million workers. About 80% of the people in the industry are women and
most of them are from poor, rural areas.
The minimum wage was fixed at 3,000 taka a month in 2010. Labor
groups are now demanding a big increase to offset the impact of a high
inflation rate that has often climbed above 10% in Bangladesh.
PLC that source clothes from Bangladesh have been pressuring the
country to improve pay and working conditions in its factories after
high-profile and deadly factory accidents over the past year. In April a
collapse at a building full of garment factories killed more than 1,100
people, while last November a fire at another factory killed at least
110 workers.
In June the U.S. stopped giving Bangladesh duty-free
access to its markets, saying the country hadn't done enough to improve
workers' rights. Meanwhile, Bangladesh's largest apparel importer, the
European Union, also has threatened to revoke its preferential treatment
of imports from the country if factory conditions don't improve. |
DHAKA, Bangladesh—Tensions rose in Bangladesh's garment industry over
the weekend as factory owners and workers squared off over a new
minimum wage for the South Asian country's largest export industry.
Tens of thousands of garment workers took to the streets in the
capital of Dhaka on Saturday, demanding the government set minimum
monthly pay at 8,000 taka, or about $100. Today an unskilled
sewing-machine apprentice earns a minimum monthly wage of just 3,000
taka.
The factory-owners' association said a higher minimum wage could
hobble the industry as costs of other inputs to clothing production are
also rising, even as demand from many Western markets is weak
Workers blocked a key highway leading
north out of Dhaka on Saturday and clashed with police, demanding
factories in the area be closed for the day to allow workers to attend
the Dhaka rally. Several people were injured, the police said.
Labor leaders at the rally held in central Dhaka rejected an offer
from the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association to
raise wages by just 20%.
Labor leader Sirajul Islam Rony, president of Bangladesh National
Garment Workers Employees League, said there could be more protests if
the workers' demands aren't met.
"The industry is the top foreign-currency earner in the country, but
the workers are not getting the benefits," Mr. Rony said. "If the owners
don't listen to our demands, there will be more unrest in the garment
sector."
Shahidullah Azim, vice president of the Bangladesh Garment
Manufacturers and Exporters Association, said the industry cannot afford
to more than double wages.
"We are facing many challenges. The buyers are driving down the
price. The cost of production is going up. Some of our traditional
markets in Europe and America are still struggling to come out of an
economic downturn," he said. "We must take care not to kill the goose
that lays the golden eggs."
In June, Bangladesh's Ministry of Labor and Employment formed a
committee with factory owners, workers and government representatives to
review wages in the garment sector. The committee is supposed to report
back with a negotiated solution by December.
Bangladesh's garment industry exported more than $20 billion of
clothes in the fiscal year ended June 30 and employs roughly four
million workers. About 80% of the people in the industry are women and
most of them are from poor, rural areas.
The minimum wage was fixed at 3,000 taka a month in 2010. Labor
groups are now demanding a big increase to offset the impact of a high
inflation rate that has often climbed above 10% in Bangladesh.
PLC that source clothes from Bangladesh have been pressuring the
country to improve pay and working conditions in its factories after
high-profile and deadly factory accidents over the past year. In April a
collapse at a building full of garment factories killed more than 1,100
people, while last November a fire at another factory killed at least
110 workers.
In June the U.S. stopped giving Bangladesh duty-free
access to its markets, saying the country hadn't done enough to improve
workers' rights. Meanwhile, Bangladesh's largest apparel importer, the
European Union, also has threatened to revoke its preferential treatment
of imports from the country if factory conditions don't improve.
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