The Fast Fashion Industry and People

March 04, 2022

The fast fashion industry does not shy away from hurting our most vulnerable populations. In this post, we are going to be talking about how the fast fashion industry impacts people; both the people who make our clothing and those who buy them.

GARMENT WORKERS

              Industrial Global Union

The biggest impacts the fast fashion industry has in regard to people is on the garment workers; factory workers whom are hand making our clothing in unsafe, unjust and unethical conditions. There are garment workers all over the world and majority of brands hire factories from the Global South to manufacture clothes from places such as China, Bangladesh, Indonesia and India where they have the lowest labour standards, and thus purposefully lower the wages of garment workers in order to lower the overall costs of the supply chain, and ultimately provide clothing at super low prices to consumers (Ethical Consumer, 2021). It's great that fast fashion is essentially accessible for all, but at what cost? If items tend to be cheaper to begin with, sans sales and coupons, there is almost most definitely a human cost.

The fast fashion industry exploits workers whom majority are from overseas, in order to maximize their profits. As I've mentioned in the first post of this series (I will always either be referring back to multiple posts or most definitely repeating myself because it is nearly impossible not to with how complex and intersectional the topic is. Also, if I want this information and facts to really sink into your brain, it's going to be have to repeated numerous times), the main goal of these fashion brands is to maximize their profit margins (Definition: the amount by which revenue from sales exceeds costs in a business), and the only feasible way they can do that is to lower their costs by any means necessary. They prioritize profit over people.

According to Global 16 Days Campaign, there are 60-70 million garment workers worldwide and 75% are women (Global 16 Days Campaign). The women who work in these factories are often exposed to abuse and sexual harassment, discrimination and other forms of violence, nonetheless working in conditions that are unsafe with zero benefits and social protection. Garment workers work in factories with no ventilation, breathing in toxic substances, which results in the deterioration of their health from long hours of inhaling fumes from textile production. (Sustain Your Style).

85% of garment workers do not make a living wage (Definition: a wage that is high enough to maintain a normal standard of living) (Garment Worker Centre), which is different from a minimum wage, in that a minimum wage is the lowest wage permitted by law, which means one can still maintain a standard living. Garment workers are known to get paid a "piece rate", which means they get paid 2-6 cents per piece of garment. They also work extremely long hours (60-70 hours) a week and do not get paid overtime, taking home about $300 (Garment Worker Centre).

One recent event occurred during the pandemic in March 2020 when brands had to close all stores and cancel massive orders due to the global lockdown, resulting in the decision to not pay for the clothing that was ordered from factories, and thus factory workers not being paid and many losing their jobs (Consumed, 2021). Typically, these brands purposefully outsource manufacturing for the low cost, but due to the unregulated legal bindings, they also choose to only pay when the clothing get shipped to the destination, not when they are hired to make the clothing. The factory workers end up being in deeper debt because not only do they pay for the materials to make the clothing, but now they cannot pay their workers or any other logistics due to this theft. 

This issue resulted in the #PAYUP campaign started by Remake (a non-profit working at the intersections of labour rights, climate justice and fashion activism), which demanded brands pay their workers (the factory workers are considered their workers too because they hire them to make their clothing...isn't that common sense? Clearly not to fashion brands who treat them as if they're not their employees too), alongside other intersecting issues such as; 

  • Keep workers safe
  • Show transparency
  • Give workers centre stage
  • Sign enforceable contracts
  • End starvation wages
  • Help pass laws
Some of the brands that are popularly known and have currently not paid up yet are as follows:
  • Urban Outfitters (Anthropologie, Free People)
  • American Eagle Outfitters
  • Arcadia (Topshop)
  • JCPenney
  • Walmart (Asda)
  • TJX (T.J Maxx, Marshalls)
Here is the website you can check out and learn more about this issue (and much much more..)

This is just one of the many unlawful and unethical issues garment workers are facing and experiencing on a daily basis and there is no excuse to aid and abet brands and companies whom are continually feeding their pockets whilst they're emptying the pockets of workers in the Global South (or rather, not filling it up, amongst other things).

Another massive incident that occurred and which I mentioned in the first post was the collapse of the Rana Plaza in the Dhaka District of Bangladesh in 2013. The Rana Plaza collapsed due to a structural failure, leaving 1,134 garment workers dead and approximately 2,500 injured. The structural issues and natural degrading of the building was known to managers and building owners, but despite that, garment workers were told to continue work due to pressures to complete orders. No action was taken to fix the matter and after the collapse and death of 1,134 garment workers, majority women, this disaster soon spurred a global response and call to action of the unethical, unsafe conditions, pressures and dangers of the fast fashion industry. This remains the deadliest garment factory disaster in history. 

One example of a global response was the formation of Fashion Revolution, an organization and movement founded in the wake of the Rana Plaza disaster, which has grown to become the world's largest fashion activism movement, mobilising citizens, brands and policymakers through research, education and advocacy (directly from Fashion Revolution's website). Its vision is to have a global fashion industry that protects and restores the environment and values people over profit. 
Their main goals are:
  • End human and environmental exploitation in the global fashion industry
  • Safe working conditions and living wages for all people in the supply chain
  • Redistributed and more equal balance of power across the global fashion industry
  • A bigger and stronger labour movement in the global fashion industry
  • A global fashion industry that works to conserve precious resources  and regenerate ecosystems
  • A culture of transparency and accountability across the value chain
  • An end to throwaway culture and shift to a system where materials are used for much longer and nothing goes to waste
  • Heritage, craftsmanship and local wisdom are recognized and valued
And in order to enact these changes, it begins with cultural change, industry change, and policy change.

You can learn more about it by visiting this link

THE FACTS:

  • Ethiopian garment workers earn a base wage of $26 a month. The minimum monthly living wage in Ethiopia is about $110 (Remake)
  • 14 to 16 hours per day is the average working day in most manufacturing countries (Sustain Your Style)
  • 50 workers have died and another 5000 are sick due to blasted sand inhalation in denim factories in Turkey (Sustain Your Style)
  • Garment workers must work until 2 or 3 am during peak season to meet deadlines imposed by fashion brands (Sustain Your Style)
To learn more about the impacts of the fast fashion industry on garment workers, please check out these movements and resources:

Remake https://remake.world/
Garment Worker Center https://garmentworkercenter.org/
Fair Wage Network https://fair-wage.com/
The OR Foundation https://theor.org/
Remember Who Made Them https://rememberwhomadethem.com/
Fashion Takes Action https://fashiontakesaction.com/
Fashion Act Now https://www.fashionactnow.org/?lang=en

CONSUMERS

              Blue Ocean Network

If you think you as a consumer (we are all consumers, but we are also much more than that), have nothing to do with the impacts and rise of fast fashion, think not! Consumers have a lot of power.. I mean a lot. As mentioned in the previous post, consumers increase the demand, which increase the overproduction of clothing, which then ultimately leads to an overconsumption. Consumers and brands work together, and you may not concretely realize it. And I'm not just talking about influencers who literally work with brands to represent them and encourage us to buy, buy, buy.

As consumers, engaging and investing in fast fashion does not ideally serve us in the way a temporary wave of dopamine hits us and makes us feel that we are better now. It's all temporary, surface level and not at all long-term. They continue to feed us the ideologies and beliefs that we need new clothes every week, month, etc., that this item is in trend, therefore we need it because if we don't, we are valued as less than and excluded from the rest of society. Or they feed into our insecurities of what is deemed acceptable, honourable and likeable (Consumed, 2021). This won't change until we choose to learn, unlearn and break the cycle of consumerism in the fast fashion industry and it starts with you.

It is so easy to be manipulated but also swayed and influenced by what we see online, in specific the likes of Instagram, where anybody who is anybody can gain and hold a certain amount of followers and be an influential personality to thousands of folks, those who are young impressionable youth and those who are much older but want to feel included still. Just remember these are still brands selling us the idea of beauty standards and what is currently popular and in demand. These brands and influencers profit off of our insecurities (or just plain consumerist minds) and all it does in the end is empty out our pockets and fill up our closets (and mind) with items we don't need and may no longer want.

It becomes less about the clothing itself and more about keeping up with new trends. We live in a disposable and throwaway culture where our clothing holds less meaning and the lifecycle of our clothes are short-lived. We need to redirect our worth and value, not by cheaply made clothing that seems worthwhile at the beginning, but by our sense of self and who we feel confident as in how we dress, which may look like re-wearing the same clothing but styling it differently, shopping second hand to find unique items that others may not have, or prioritizing comfort over style. Training our minds to be okay with what we have or to figure out what our style is and what makes us feel confident without feeding into mainstream society and consumerism can truly change the game. 

We don't need brands and businesses from the fast fashion industry, they need us. They need us in order to live, thrive and sustain themselves. Imagine if our buying power proved that we as people have a voice and the power to make decisions that are better for people and the planet we're living on. We don't need to imagine that because we can and it's by time we do so.


SOURCES USED

Sustain Your Style https://www.sustainyourstyle.org/en/whats-wrong-with-the-fashion-industry#anchor-working-conditions

Good On You https://goodonyou.eco/impact-fast-fashion-garment-workers/

Fashion Revolution https://www.fashionrevolution.org/about/

Remake https://payupfashion.com/?__hstc=256314772.f18cf8e08c17f2027a7f15d49aca91ab.1643746918187.1646337577921.1646414695232.13&__hssc=256314772.1.1646414695232&__hsfp=4021855466

Garment Worker Center https://garmentworkercenter.org/get-informed/#:~:text=Approximately%2085%25%20of%20garment%20workers,dirty%2C%20and%20poorly%20ventilated%20factories.

Ethical Consumer https://www.ethicalconsumer.org/fashion-clothing/workers-rights-clothing-industry-what-consumers-can-do

16 Days Campaign https://16dayscampaign.org/campaigns/garment-worker-sector-focus/#:~:text=There%20are%20currently%2060%E2%80%9370,worldwide%3B%2075%25%20are%20women.

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