Cambodia Increases Garment Industry Minimum Wage


Cambodia agreed Wednesday to raise the minimum wage in its important clothing industry by 28 percent to $128 a month, falling short of labor unions’ $140 proposal.

The Labor Advisory Committee, representing employers, workers and the government, originally agreed on a $123 minimum wage. A Labor Ministry statement said it was increased to $128 after instructions were received from long-serving Prime Minister Hun Sen to do so. The new wage level takes effect at the beginning of next year.

Two years ago, a militant union campaign to double the then-minimum wage of $80 in the textile, garment and footwear sector resulted in clashes with police and a consequent crackdown on public protests. A $100 level was set for 2014, and the unions scaled back their demand for the negotiations over the 2015 level. Employers had proposed the minimum wage be set at $110 for next year.

The clothing industry is Cambodia’s biggest export earner, employing about 500,000 people in more than 500 garment and shoe factories. In 2013, the Southeast Asian country shipped more than $5 billion worth of products to the United States and Europe.

The Coalition of Cambodian Apparel Workers’ Democratic Union has not yet accepted the 2015 wage level, said union president Ath Thorn, who took part in the negotiations.

The Labor Ministry’s statement said that when other benefits were calculated, the workers would be making an average of $147 to $156 monthly next year.

Labor Minister Ith Samheng said he believed that the wage hike would result in better living conditions for the workers.

Labor militancy is a concern for the government, especially because major unions are generally allied with the opposition Cambodia National Rescue Party, whose political strength has been growing in recent years.

Source: Yahoo News | November 12, 2014

Cambodian Economy Defies Global Trend But Challenges Remain


Some of the world’s leading economies are seeing a slowdown in growth – dragging down the global economy with them.

But here in Asia, Cambodia – which goes to the polls on 28 July in a general election – is one country that has been defying the trend.

The South East Asian economy saw its growth pick up speed in 2012 and the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has forecast “further robust growth, with trajectory expected to steepen slightly in 2014”.

According to the ADB, Cambodia’s economy expanded at an annual rate of 7.2% in 2012, up from 7.1% in 2011 and 6% in 2010.

Cambodia, like many other countries in Asia, has for many years relied on its export sector to be a key driver of growth.

Low cost of labour has seen the country become a key manufacturer and exporter of garments and footwear to markets such as the US and European Union (EU).

Economic problems in those markets have dented consumer confidence, and in 2012 Cambodia saw the pace of growth of its exports decline – but , according to the ADB, domestic consumption jumped by 9.5% and is expected to rise further in the coming years. And as conditions in the US and EU improve, exports are likely to rebound.

“European demand for Cambodian garments and footwear is expected to maintain good growth, supported by duty-free access to the EU,” the bank said in a report on the Cambodian economy published in April.

“Shipments to the US will likely be subdued this year but should pick up after that,” it added.

‘Destination of choice’

Another key driver of Cambodia’s growth has been the surge in foreign direct investment in the country, which jumped by 75% last year to $1.5bn (£1bn).

Along with traditional sectors such as garment manufacturing, foreign money has also been used to help fund new industries such as auto-parts manufacturing and agricultural products processing.

Low labour costs and Cambodia’s proximity to key markets such as China and other emerging economies in South East Asia are attractive to foreign investors.

And with wages in countries such as Thailand and China on the rise, Cambodia is likely to become even more attractive.

“This trend is only going to get stronger with more companies looking to set up operations in Asia,” says Rajiv Biswas, chief economist for Asia-Pacific at IHS Global Insight.

“Given its competitiveness and the current economic environment, Cambodia is going to increasingly become a destination of choice for foreign investors.”

‘Skill mismatch’

But there have been protests in recent months with workers demanding an increase in their wages.

And critics say for the country to take the next step in its growth cycle, it needs to diversify into high-end manufacturing on a bigger scale.

But Cambodia may find it tough to do so, not least because of the skill level of the majority of its labour force.

“A key restraint to growth is the skill mismatch, or the lack of adequately skilled labour in the high-end industries,” says Srinivas Madhur, director of research at Cambodia Development Resource Institute.

“The enrolment rate in tertiary education is only 14%, which means the pool of skilled people is very small.”

Mr Biswas says that the inability of Cambodia to move into advanced manufacturing is a “great vulnerability”.

“What is crucial now, is that they need to develop their education sector and they need to build partnerships to bring more advanced education into the country, especially vocational training,” he says.

Poverty concerns

Another key area of concern is that Cambodia remains one of the poorest countries in Asia.

Its per capita income in 2012 was $946, according to the World Bank. That compares with $5,474 in Thailand and $3,557 in Indonesia.

The ADB has quoted the World Health Organization as saying vitamin and mineral deficiencies alone cost Cambodia’s economy $146m each year.

The bank says 55% of under-fives were anaemic in 2010.

And malnutrition and poor health stunt the growth of up to 40% of Cambodian children.

Economic growth has seen poverty levels come down – but critics say the country needs to do much more to ensure the benefits trickle down to the poor.

“Inclusive growth”, they say, is a much better claim to fame than “robust growth”.

Source: BBC News | July 25, 2013 | By: Puneet Pal Singh

Report Says Factory Initiative A Failure


Hamstrung by its own confidential reporting system and an unwillingness to take a stand on rampant labour issues, the International Labour Organization’s Better Factories Cambodia (BFC) initiative is no longer a “best practice” model for improving conditions in garment factories, a report by a leading US university says.

Monitoring in the Dark: An Evaluation of the International Labour Organization’s Better Factories Monitoring and Reporting Program, released yesterday, says workers have lost confidence in BFC, founded in 2001, partly because its factory reporting process catered more to the needs of brands and bosses than theirs.

“BFC’s current operating practices… contribute to the program’s under-effectiveness, due primarily to a glaring lack of transparency and an institutional over-emphasis on protecting the interests of

factory owners and international buyers, rather than responding to appeals from garment workers to protect them from abuse,” the report says.

Launched yesterday in Phnom Penh by the International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic at Stanford Law School and the Workers Rights Consortium, the report speaks of a lack of clarity regarding BFC’s methods and says it has no formal procedure to handle complaints from workers.

It also claims BFC rarely takes a stand on labour issues, such as a decline in real wages over the past decade.

“BFC has not… used its public reports or newsletters to present statistics that document the growing gap between garment workers’ wages and the cost of living,” the report says.

“Labour activists believe that the BFC needs to focus more of its energy on the issue of declining wages.”

Excessive overtime has been widespread in the past decade, the majority of the industry’s workforce has been shifted to fixed-duration contracts and collective bargaining has been scant, the report continues.

Apparel from the garment industry, most of which goes to the US and the EU, is exported at a rate of $4 billion per year – about 85 per cent of the Kingdom’s total exports.

Since the end of quotas in 2005, under which BFC reported to the US government about factory conditions in exchange for a guaranteed level of imports, some conditions had worsened and little scrutiny
on BFC’s monitoring role had been placed, the report says.

“BFC’s role has changed to resemble more closely that of most other factory auditing bodies: providing confidential factory monitoring reports to owners, and, on a for-pay basis, to international buyers.”

“This confidential reporting practice… significantly reduces the incentives for factory owners and the brands… to improve working conditions.”

The report urges BFC to issue public reports on individual factories and respond to workers’ concerns. Other recommendations include that BFC expand worker outreach, reduce opportunities for factories to hide violations, report findings to workers, publish remediation efforts and engage with factory owners and brands.

Stephan Sonnenberg, clinical lecturer at Stanford Law School’s International Human Rights and Conflict Resolution Clinic, said yesterday that the need to push big brands to be accountable was vital.

“Buyers can insist the factory managers improve labour conditions and insist they co-operate with BFC, but… they can threaten to [leave Cambodia] and they have a global distribution network that’s engineered very specifically to be able to do that at very short notice.”

Brands that source from Cambodia include Levi’s, Gap, H&M, WalMart, Puma and Nike.

BFC employees were doing their doing their jobs competently, Sonnenberg said, but the institutional design within which they were operating was hindering them.

“We see so much potential promise for BFC to actually bring together various stakeholders and be a catalyst for positive change in Cambodia.”

Asked whether funding should be withdrawn if recommendations were not met, Sonnenberg said: “I think if BFC is left to languish, and more and more voices grow critical and sceptical of BFC’s efficacy, then that question will be a very appropriate one.

“There are certainly some stakeholders we spoke to who believe BFC not to be worth the money as currently designed.”

Better Factories is funded by the government, the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia (GMAC), the World Bank, the US Department of Labor and AusAid. It also makes money by selling its reports to brands.

Under its monitoring system, factories not in compliance with the Labour Law are not named publicly. General monitoring results are released in biannual synthesis reports.

Jill Tucker, BFC’s chief technical adviser, said yesterday she had not seen the final report, but said an early draft had wanted BFC “to be everything”.

“We don’t have that capacity,” she said, adding that BFC was not an advocacy organisation, but a tripartite body that works with unions, the government and GMAC, whose secretary-general, Ken Loo, could not be reached yesterday.

“Whenever we take a stand, not everyone’s happy. We agree there should some transparency, but we’re not going to post every report,” Tucker said. “We do not have enforcement power. Everyone wants us to – but we don’t.”

Many examples existed, however, of issues BFC had pushed that had brought change for workers, Tucker said.

“We have coverage of the whole industry. We can push issues – like the prison labour issue,” she said. “The wage issue is another one.”

“We’re always trying to improve our programs. We took on the footwear industry. We’re taking on the worker nutrition issue.”

Dave Welsh, American Center for International Labor Solidarity country manager, said it was crucial that BFC be able to enforce its findings by issuing a penalty or punishment – or at least by publicly naming a factory violating the law.

He added, however, that the more transparent BFC became, the less likely it was that the government and brands would want it in the country.

Welsh said the BFC model was planned for Bangladesh, where the number of factories is “tenfold” and problems, including assassinations, were rife.

“If it’s the same model with no transparency, there’s going to be problems.”

Sath Samuth, secretary of state at the Labour Ministry, said his ministry supported BFC because it helped improve the reputation of Cambodia’s garment industry overseas.

“We do not reject recommendations [in this report], but we would need all parties to follow them. If we want change, we can discuss these issues.”

Rong Chhun, president of the Cambodian Confederation of Unions, said the BFC was a good idea, but it often did not respond to real issues faced by workers.

“What they report and what really happens are two different things,” he said.

Personifying the challenges confronted by workers was a woman at yesterday’s launch.

“Last month, I did not have enough money, so I had to borrow $10,” the worker, who asked not to be named, said.

Clutching a bag filled with sandwiches provided to guests at the launch, the woman said she would take it back to her factory for her co-workers, who sometimes can’t afford to buy enough food.

Source: Phnom Penh Post (February 19, 2013)