Big clothing brands flout own promises to pay workers fair living wage

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Only three of 20 big clothes firms studied by Sheffield University — H&M, C&A and G-Star Raw — have committed to paying a living wage

Only three of 20 large clothes firms studied by Sheffield University — H&M, C&A and G-Star Raw — have committed to paying a living wageLondon — The world’s top clothing brands are failing to fulfil their own promises to pay workers a fair living wage that covers basic family needs, academics and activists said on Thursday.

Only three of 20 big clothes companies studied by Sheffield University — Sweden’s H&M, and Dutch giants C&A and G-Star RAW — have committed to wages that meet that brief, their report said. But the desire for affordable, throwaway fashion persists, squeezing wages for the workers who stitch most Western clothes.

Gap said it was working with partners and other brands to engage governments and encourage wage-setting mechanisms as “we know there is more work to be done”. H&M — the world’s second-largest fashion retailer after Zara owner Inditex — in 2013 announced a first-of-its-kind plan to ensure a living wage for about 850,000 textile workers by 2018.

Source: Education Headlines (educationheadlines.net)

 

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