Looking
for a quick fix How
weak social auditing is keeping workers in
sweatshops
Clean Clothes Campaign, Nov
2005
Chapter 1: Introduction/summary
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Introduction
Social audits to check working conditions
in production facilities emerged in the
mid-1990s after a number of high profile
companies were widely scrutinized for substandard
working conditions in their supply chains.
At that time, a growing number of companies-for
example Nike, Gap, Levi Strauss, and C&A-had
adopted codes of conduct that in essence
were pledges to prevent exploitation and
abuse of workers producing their goods.
Labour advocates soon challenged these companies
to demonstrate conformity to the standards
they had adopted. Calls for independent,
civil society based forms of workplace assessments
were made.
The
large majority of companies ignored these
calls and actually did very little to implement
or enforce their codes of conduct. A few
companies, however, started to use social
audit firms to inspect workplaces. This
was met with little enthusiasm from labour
rights activists who suspected that social
audits were undertaken mainly to deceive
the public. Others questioned the effectiveness
of the audits or feared that social audits
were mainly carried out as a form of risk
assessment.
Many of these fears were validated when
researchers and journalists reported on
important flaws in social auditing methods.
They found that social audits typically
failed to detect important instances of
non-compliance with labour standards. Workplaces
that social auditors found to be in compliance
with standards were in fact no more than
sweatshops. (1)
One decade down the road much has changed
and yet stayed the same.
Social
audits have become a burgeoning practice
within the garment and sportswear industry.
Tens of thousands of social audits are commissioned
annually by hundreds of brand-name companies
("brands") or retailers. A whole
industry of commercial social auditors,
self-assigned experts, and quasi-independent
ethical enterprises has jumped on the social
audit bandwagon (see chapter 4).
On the positive side a number of companies
have learned from their own experiences
as well as from the critics. They have started
to identify the limitations of social auditing
methods and have moved in the direction
of a more comprehensive approach to improve
working conditions. These firms recognise
the need for an overarching system to evaluate
company claims and to rise above the limits
of corporate self-regulation. A few multi-stakeholder
initiatives (MSIs) have been set up that
bring together a variety of business interests,
NGOs and/or trade unions to try to develop
(more) systematic approaches to code implementation,
monitoring and verification, as well as
developing structures for accountability
to civil society. This report will argue
that only social audits embedded in a comprehensive
range of actions can be useful. These other
actions are covered in more detail in chapter
6.
Unfortunately,
this comprehensive approach stands in sharp
contrast with the current standard practice
of social auditing still utilised by many
of the biggest players in the industry.
As this report will show, the non-specialist
retail sector (supermarkets, discount and
department stores) and mail order sectors
and in particular are developing less stringent
models to implement codes of conduct.
It is in those contexts that unbranded
retailers have managed to escape scrutiny,
and as a result have felt less pressure
to behave in a responsible way toward the
workers employed in their supply chains.
The social audit methods used by retailers
such as KarstadtQuelle (Germany) or Wal-Mart
(United States), in fact are based on a
seriously flawed model largely discredited
not only by labour rights advocates but
also by those within the industry who have
had a longer-term involvement in this field
but on an extended scale. The impact of
these programmes on working conditions is
at best superficial. Their approach seems
for the most part to be minimalist-they
tend to invest as little time and money
as possible, and more worryingly, they seem
to be promoting a "lowering of the
bar", in order to make it easier to
tell consumers that they are meeting goals
for treating workers responsibly. A Chinese
NGO identified this phenomenon in interviews
with managers in China:
The
level of enthusiasm in implementing CSR
among brand-name companies far exceeds that
of retailers. Factory managers said that
in the in-house verification personnel and
independent auditors sent by brand-name
companies investigated problems quite thoroughly
and could not easily be fobbed off. Checks
by retailers, however, were generally a
little more lax. Workers
could clearly
remember investigators from H&M and
New Look coming to their dormitories to
interview them. Managers in two factories
said that Wal-Mart's social responsibility
inspection team only spends about three
hours at the factories, during which they
verify wages, working hours and personnel
records, make a brief inspection tour of
the factory, and meet three or four workers
in the factory office's reception room.
They also said that Wal-Mart inspections
were generally quite easy to bluff, and
that because Wal-Mart's unit prices for
orders are extremely low, their inspection
teams were not likely to seriously demand
that the factory adhere to the code of practice.
(2)
In some cases, these companies fail to address,
or turn a blind eye, to extreme abuses of
workers, such as was the case in Bangladesh
in April, when Spectrum Sweater collapsed
killing 64 workers. Workers report that
their employers had made their lives hell
before the disaster. Workers were held in
such low regard that their attempts to raise
the alarm about dangerous conditions prior
to the collapse were simply ignored, not
just by factory management but by clients
as well. The factory had undergone at least
one social audit by Carrefour and had undergone
a "quality audit" by KarstadtQuelle
reportedly done by international social
auditing firm SGS.
This report is a critical assessment of
the social audit system adopted by these
kind of companies." It takes into account
the social auditing experiences of approximately
40 factories in eight countries.
Chapter
2 and Chapter
3 look at the ways in which factory
owners prepare for audits, worker perceptions
of the process, and the perceived impact
of audits on working conditions. It covers
in some detail, using new field research,
why social auditing is not achieving as
much as was hoped, in spite of significant
discussion over the last 10 years by researchers,
journalists and activists (3)
about whether social audits can accurately
assess labour conditions and encourage improvements.
In spite of this discussion, and in light
of the evidence in this report, it is clear
that mainstream social auditing consistently
manages to miss crucial violations of workplace
rights, in particular regarding what are
described as "intangible" areas
such as freedom of association, working
hours, abuse and harassment.
Chapter 4
looks at the global social auditing industry
and assesses its successes and failings
over a decade of existence.
Chapter 5
considers current problematic trends toward
over-reliance on social auditing, and
chapter 6 makes a series of recommendations
for companies and social auditors.
This research draws
a number of key conclusions:
1. Social audits are failing to deliver
as a tool for assessing code compliance,
particularly in determining violations of
freedom of association, excessive and forced
overtime, abusive treatment and discrimination
of workers.
2. Workers and their organisations are
marginalized in the social audit process.
Without their full participation in the
auditing process their concerns, particularly
gender-related concerns, are missed. Relevant
local stakeholders outside the factory such
as trade unions and women's and labour NGOs
are rarely consulted or involved.
3. Social auditors are making it too easy
for workplaces to receive positive evaluations,
particularly by announcing audit visits
in advance, thereby giving factory managers
time to prepare for audits and convey a
false impression of working conditions.
4. Factory managers are deceiving social
auditors in many ways, most notably by coaching
workers before they are interviewed by auditors
to convey false or incomplete information
and by falsifying records.
5. Social audits are usually too short,
too superficial and too sloppy to identify
certain types of code violations.
6. Workers are badly informed about their
rights, often too scared for their own jobs
to speak up about problems during audits,
and generally do not have the possibility
to file a complaint.
7. The vast majority of social audits is
conducted by global firms whose staff is
generally unskilled and inexperienced to
do the job, and whose business model conflicts
with the requirements for credible, independent
social auditing.
8. Audits are often not followed by effective
remediation. Improvements at the workplace
are limited to health and safety issues
and tend to be superficial.
9. The audit industry is closed and secretive,
preventing serious discussion about its
policy and practices and possible improvements
to its methods.
10. Certain buyers, particularly well-known
brands that have been targeted by labour
rights campaigns, and those cooperating
more intensively with labour advocates are
actually doing a better job in developing
more comprehensive and participatory social
audit models. Others, mainly unbranded buyers
and non-specialised retailers, are promoting
the failing audit model described in this
report, particularly in the context of fast
growing business dominated CSR initiatives.
There are a number of ways in which the
CCC believes that companies that are serious
about respecting workers' rights can get
on the right track (described in detail
in chapter 6):
Place workers at the centre of social auditing
processes: Recognizing that the majority
of workers in this industry are women all
auditing procedures must be gender sensitive.
Gender blind auditing is bound to miss out
on key input from workers. Workers are the
intended beneficiaries of audits therefore
it their input is not sought out and included
in auditing and associated processes (remediation)
such efforts will not contribute to sustainable
improvements to their labour conditions.
Training and education is a precursor for
creating an atmosphere where workers are
informed of their rights and can effectively
use channels intended for conveying concerns.
Sourcing companies must adopt a more comprehensive
"toolbox" approach if they want
to make a credible effort to face up to
their responsibilities to workers in their
supply chains. Quality social auditing includes
unannounced visits, interviews of workers
outside of the workplace and involves skilled
local experts and civil society organizations.
This alone however is not enough and should
be combined with other tools in a broader
and longer-term program to address and remediate
violations of workers rights, including
partnership with local organizations; grievance
and complaints mechanisms; education and
training; a pro-active approach to freedom
of association; address existing business
or purchasing practices; effective remediation
and increased transparency.
Systematic problems at both the point of
production and the point of consumption
can only be successfully addressed through
an industry-wide approach. Playing an active
role in credible multi-stakeholder initiatives
(MSIs) can also be a valuable step for companies
to take in improving their auditing and
other code compliance work.
Notes:
- Workplace with substandard
working conditions
- Global Purchasing Practices
& Chinese Women Workers (2003)
- Critical articles on
the quality of social auditing include:
O'Rourke (1997, 2000, 2002); Bendell (2001);
Far East Economic Review( 2001); Ascoly
and Zeldenrust (2003); Oldenziel (2001);
de Haan and Oldenziel (2003); Philippine
Daily Inquirer, (2003); Maquila Solidarity
Network (2004); Auret and Barrientos (2004);
Financial Times( 2005); Esbenshade (2004),
Hilton (2005).
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