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The human cost of the "Bra Wars" crisis between China and Europe can
be revealed today.
More than 80 million items of clothing destined for Europe are in limbo, their
import blocked by hastily imposed EU quotas designed to protect the continent
from the recent deluge of cheaper Chinese goods.
Retailers say that the quotas inhibit free trade and will hit consumers hardest,
through price rises and shortages of jumpers, trousers and lingerie. But the
real victims of the cut-price clothing wars being waged on the British high
street - and the trade row between the EU and China - are the poorest nations.
Campaigners say that the scrapping of textile trade rules eight months ago
has the potential to destroy the economies of tsunami-hit countries such as
Bangladesh, while the EU quotas are only designed to protect rich countries
such as France and Italy, rather than help those worst hit by the situation.
Campaigners said that Western demand for cut-price clothes was fueling a vicious
circle of supply-chain switches, wage reductions and worsening labor conditions
across the world. Amy Barry of Oxfam said: "Big companies that pile on
the pressure down the supply chain must take some responsibility for labor abuses
that occur in developing countries. Consumers too, should ask what are the implications
of their demands for the latest fashion at bargain basement prices? It is simply
unsustainable to keep demanding that suppliers deliver goods quicker, cheaper
and with more flexibility. Ultimately, someone will be paying the price, and
more often than not this person will be a vulnerable worker at the end of the
supply chain."
The crisis has its origins in the scrapping, at the beginning of this year,
of the Multi Fiber Agreement (MFA), which set quotas on how many garment items
could be imported from individual developing countries into the US and Europe.
Cheaper labor and manufacturing costs mean that China can undercut other countries
by up to 25 per cent, so hundreds of retailers switched production there from
1 January. As a result, garment imports from China soared by up to 1,200 per
cent, with more than 7 billion extra items expected this year.
Within months, at least 50,000 jobs were lost in traditional textile countries
as factories closed down, and more than one million jobs could eventually be
lost in countries such as Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Cambodia, according to the
United Nations. Some of the poorest nations have lost 10 per cent of their export
earnings in the past eight months alone.
But it was only when firms in Italy and France began shutting that the EU acted.
In July, it imposed quotas on 10 categories of garments coming from China. By
then, millions of goods were already made up and on the way to Europe, and are
now awaiting the results of negotiations between Chinese and EU officials.
Campaigners say that the quotas will do nothing to help poorer countries. Ms
Barry said: "This is protectionism at its worst. European countries preach
to the developing countries about opening up their trade, then go and do something
like this to protect their own member states."
Neil Kearney, general secretary of the International Textile, Garment and Leather
Workers' Federation , said: "Our concern is that countries are trying to
undercut China and each other by increasing hours and reducing wages. Garment
manufacturing used to be an economic powerhouse for poorer countries - a way
of improving their lot.
"Now the people who work in these factories are on subsistence living,
and the undercutting means these nations cannot lift themselves out of poverty."
While they differ on the solution to the problem, charities, unions and retailers
are agreed on one thing - that the situation has been badly mismanaged by the
EU, including Peter Mandelson, the trade commissioner.
Oxfam says the MFA should have been phased out, with Western assistance for
poorer countries to adapt their industries.
Retailers argue that trade should be completely liberalized with no quotas.
Alisdair Gray, director of the British Retail Consortium (BRC) in Brussels,
said: "We were not consulted at all about the way in which the MFA was
scrapped or the quotas were brought in, and the officials in Brussels seemed
to have no idea about how our industry works.
"Clothes are clearly labeled and if someone doesn't want to buy a T-shirt
from China and instead pay twice as much for a European-made product, they can
go and do so."