Dec 7, 2006
Action on Transparency: Hong
Kong and Canada
A
new campaign was recently started by Oxfam Hong
Kong: Let’s turn the garment industry inside out
– we have the right to know!
Read
this report >>
In a new research Transparency
Report: How Hong Kong Garment Companies Can Improve
Public Reporting of their Labour Standards,
Oxfam Hong Kong assesses how well Hong Kong top
apparel companies are reporting to the public on
labour standards and practices in their supply chain
, and finds that all these companies are not providing
the public sufficient information.
The 16 garment companies included in the research
are: Esprit , Giordano , PMTD Limited, Moiselle,
Texwinca, Bossini, Heroic Rendezvous, Youth Grace
International Limited, I.TLimited, Veeko, LaiSun,
Goldlion, G2000, Chickeeduck, U-Right, F.C.K.
Oxfam Hong Kong urges these garment companies
to demonstrate a commitment to Corporate Social
Responsibility through:
1. Providing consumers with sufficient information
on labour practices in their supply chains;
2. Committing to ethical labour standards in
the supply chain at the highest level of corporate
management and ensuring labour standards are integrated
throughout the company;
3. Protecting and promoting labour rights, and
thereby contributing to poverty reduction.
You can join this campaign now! Read the full-report
and sign the online petition at:
http:/www.maketradefair.org.hk/trad_06/petition_eng.asp
Today, december 7, The Canadian "Ethical
Trading Action Group" released their second
Transparency Report Card comparing public reporting
on labour standards compliance by 30 top apparel
retailers and brands selling clothes in the Canadian
market, including Levi Strauss, Nike, adidas,
H&M, Mountain Equipment Co-op, Roots, La Senza,
Reitmans and 22 others.
"Revealing Clothing" assesses companies
on the basis of their policies and programs to
achieve and maintain compliance with recognized
international labour standards in factories around
the world where their products are made, and the
steps they are taking to thoroughly, effectively
and transparently communicate these efforts to
the public.
The Report Card shows that over the past year,
some major brands and retailers have improved
reporting on labour standards compliance. Canadian
companies Mountain Equipment Co-op, Marks
Work Wearhouse and the Hudsons Bay Company
all improved their scores in this years
rating. But despite improvements in reporting
there is still a long way to go to improve actual
labour conditions in apparel factories worldwide.
Leading companies have publicly expressed a willingness
to discuss root causes of persistent labour rights
abuses in their supply chains. More companies
are reporting training programs for factory management
and other efforts to change persistent bad practices.
But ETAGs study shows that companies are
less willing to discuss how their own business
model of ever-lower prices and highly-mobile production
might be causing these problems.
Supply factories receive negative incentives
when retailers and brands shift production from
factories that have made improvements in labour
practices to other countries with lower labour
costs, or ask factory owners to meet higher standards
while simultaneously demanding lower prices.
There is also a need for companies to engage
on a consistent basis with factory workers, NGOs,
faith groups, and trade unions in developing sustainable
solutions. ETAG found that fourteen of the thirty
companies surveyed reported engagement with NGOs
and trade unions, up from only five in last years
report. However, with a few exceptions, most companies
are not fully engaging factory workers in labour
standards compliance efforts.
A complete copy of ETAGs 2006 Transparency
Report Card or an Executive Summary can be downloaded
now from: www.maquilasolidarity.org