Indian garment workers earn 11 paisa an hour: Research
Bengaluru, Feb 4: Research by the University of California found that women and girls from the most marginalised communities toiled for as little as 15 cents (11pisa) an hour in homes across India. Child labour and forced labour were rife and wages regularly suppressed.
"Tainted Garments: The Exploitation of Women and Girls in India's Home-based Garment Sector," by modern slavery expert Siddharth Kara offers investigation yet into the conditions of work for women and girls in India's home- based garment sector.
Approximately 85 percent of the home-based garment workers documented for the report work exclusively in supply chains of major apparel brands in the United States and European Union.
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The most important findings of Kara's research are:
•
Home-based
garment
workers
in
India
consist
almost
entirely
of
women
and
girls
from
historically
oppressed
ethnic
communities
who
earn
approximately
$0.15
per
hour.
•
99.3
per
cent
of
the
workers
were
either
Muslims
or
belonged
to
a
heavily
subordinated
community,
called
a
"Scheduled
Caste."
•
99.2
per
cent
work
in
conditions
of
forced
labor
under
Indian
law,
which
means
they
do
not
receive
the
state-stipulated
minimum
wage.
•
95.5
per
cent
of
workers
were
female.
•
Almost
none
of
the
workers
received
any
sort
of
medical
care
when
injured
at
work.
•
None
of
the
workers
belonged
to
a
trade
union
and
none
had
a
written
work
agreement.
The Indian garment industry is the second largest manufacturer and exporter in the world after China. The sector directly employs 12.9 million in formal factory settings, and it indirectly employs millions more in informal, home-based settings. The primary destinations of India's garment exports are the United States and the European Union, which receive almost half (47%) of the country's total apparel exports.
Scores of major brands and boutique retailers source garments from the areas documented in the study. Many companies do a reasonable job at promoting decent conditions in the first-tier factories of their suppliers in India; however, they largely have inadequate visibility into sub-contracted work from their suppliers to home-based workers. Given the size and brand recognition of some of the companies that source garments from India, they are best positioned to address the findings of this report on a meaningful scale and thereby substantially improve conditions for home-based garment workers in India.
"The aim of this investigation is to provide insights into the lives of these workers in the hope that governments, companies, and nonprofits will be able to coordinate on solutions to address the exploitation we documented," said Kara.
"We welcome the report by Mr. Kara, which sheds light on informal workers-predominately women and girls-in the home-based garment sector in India, who face a range of abuses," said GoodWeave CEO Nina Smith. "Bringing greater visibility and rights to them re-defines the traditional concept of global apparel supply chain responsibility and requires action by governments, companies, NGOs, and consumers."