Fashion brands urged to support wage increase

Consumers and activists across Europe are mobilising on the streets and on social media this week to ask high street fashion brands to support a minimum wage increase for garment workers in Cambodia.

The Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC) will collect petition signatures outside popular stores in London and other European cities, asking brands to support a higher minimum wage for workers in their Cambodian production facilities.

The campaign seeks an increase to a minimum monthly wage of US$150 for apparel workers.

The actions lead up to negotiations due to take place next week, when Cambodian trade unions will negotiate with government and industry officials in an attempt to raise the minimum wage.

CCC says that due to rapidly escalating living costs for workers in the Cambodian garment industry, the current minimum wage of $61 per month simply isn’t enough. Over 90 per cent of Cambodia’s garment workers are women, aged 18-35. Many have children and families to provide for on low wages, and many are now suffering from malnutrition “and live in dire poverty”.

“The rising food and fuel costs have left many workers in need. C.CAWDU is calling for $150 minimum wage, which is achievable and very necessary,” said Athit Kong, VP of the Cambodian trade union C.CADWU.

In the aftermath of a Swedish documentary focusing on H&M’s production in Cambodia, broadcast last Autumn, H&M’s representatives repeatedly acknowledged the fact that garment workers’ wages in Cambodia are too low and that there is a need to increase the minimum wage. H&M have also stated that workers should be able to live on what they earn and that the minimum wage should provide the basis for a decent livelihood.

“Major fashion brands, who often say that a minimum wage increase is the only fair way for wages to go up, must take this opportunity to act,” said Jeroen Merk from the International Clean Clothes Campaign.

“We’re calling on brands such as H&M to ‘put their money where their mouth is’ and publicly support a significant wage increase that could curb poverty for Cambodian workers,” he said.

Gap, Zara and Levi’s also source a significant number products from factories in Cambodia and Clean Clothes Campaign are all asking these brands to add their support to the negotiations.

The Clean Clothes Campaign, as part of its ‘No More Excuses’ living wage initiative, will continue to ask H&M to make long-term efforts to work for a genuine living wage in its supply chain, by adopting a concrete action plan with timelines, benchmarks and a follow up procedure.

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