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)

Investors From Korea Relocate To Cambodia


Korean investors are relocating labour-intensive businesses to countries such as Cambodia after Indonesia raised its minimum wage.

A number of Korean investors had closed their Indonesian factories and relocated to other countries in the region because their requests for minimum-wage exemption had been refused, The Jakarta Post reported.

Indonesia has raised provincial minimum wages about 40 per cent to RP 2.2 million ($226) a month.

“One or two factories have moved their garment production base to Cambodia recently because of wages,” Nam-Shik Kang, chairman of the Korean Chamber of Commerce in Cambodia, told the Post yesterday.

Cheat Khemara, senior officer at the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia, said an increasing number of Korean investors had been coming to Cambodia to invest in the garment sector.

Hiroshi Suzuki, head of the Business Research Institute for Cambodia, said there was a trend of rising labour costs in countries such as China, Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines and Vietnam.

This meant  labour-intensive industries were seeking to invest in low-labour-cost countries, including Cambodia, Suzuki said.

From last month, every Thai worker is entitled to a 300 baht ($10) daily minimum wage.

Monthly wages in Vietnam rose to 2.4 million dong ($113) in January, and Beijing has pledged to increase minimum wages to at least 40 per cent of average salaries.

The minimum wage for a Cambodian in a garment factory is $61 a month. Trade unions have called for the minimum monthly wage to be increased to between $120 and $150.

Cambodia would not lose its low labour costs advantage, Suzuki said.

“Of course, wages in Cambodia will increase to some extent.

“However, the increase would be much greater in neighbouring countries. So the advantage of low labour costs in Cambodia would not be undermined.

“Cambodia has also the advantage of its location in the centre of ASEAN and improved logistical infrastructure, such as roads and ports.”

TK Garment Co, a leading Thai fashion manufacturer, is relocating its largest production site to Cambodia to escape high wage costs.

Nam-Shik Kang, however, said that although many Korean garment factories in Vietnam were looking to relocate to Cambodia, they were hesitant “because Vietnam’s infrastructure for business is very strong and well organised”.

He said that if Cambodia raised its minimum wage to $150 a month, factories would lose their competitive edge to Vietnam and Indonesia without improving their productivity and quality.

“Many Korean investors will start thinking of relocating their production base to Myanmar very soon.”

Source: Phnom Penh Post (February 7, 2013)

Cambodia’s Energy Costs Deter Investors


Cambodia’s infrastructure is deterring highly anticipated investment into the production of raw materials to support its rapidly growing garment sector, experts say.

While garment exports rose 10.2 per cent to $5.48 billion last year, the increase of raw materials imported to support this growth increased about 20 per cent from $2.6 billion in 2011 to $3.1 billion in 2012, according to figures from the Ministry of Commerce.

In 2011 imports were approximately 53 per cent of export value, while in 2012 imports made up about 56 per cent of export value.

Ken Loo, secretary-general of the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia, said electricity costs are the simple answer to a lack of raw material production and that this is not a new phenomenon with investors anxiously waiting for power costs come down to an accessible level.

“Fabric production is a highly capital-intensive industry, it is not labour intensive. It is highly dependant on energy, so when your cost of electricity or energy is the cost that it is today, it is not economically viable for investors to come to Cambodia and invest in fabric production.

“When the price of electricity drops to a price that is more acceptable, you will see many investors come in quickly, they have been waiting for 10 years.”

Andrew Hong, permanent secretary-general of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Federation of Textile Industries said: “Strategically of course there would be a big market for raw material consumption in Cambodia, however in order to produce a raw material like yarn or fabric, the infrastructure may not be there.”

“Basically they [investors] invest in garments as they have duty free GST [goods and services tax] to Europe that is why they are moving to Cambodia, but because infrastructure and logistics do not support raw material production, the investment is not on that part.”

Hong said that while China’s scalability driven by both export and domestic demand has made it an attractive place for garment producers to purchase raw materials, a shift is occurring driven by both costs of production and a change in buyer behaviour.

“The downside of China is that the quantity that they require is very big, that means they must have big production runs,” said Hong.

“The world is now shifting in to smaller quantities and shorter runs per style, per colour. So that is why you will see a shift from buying raw materials from China to the other producing countries in ASEAN and the rest of the world.”

Loo still sees China as a major exporter of raw materials but he too sees opportunities in neighbouring countries.

“It’s always a cost consideration, the fact that [Chinese] fabric is becoming more costly comparatively to ASEAN fabric, or rather the premium on ASEAN fabric, the cost is getting lower,” Loo said.

“It makes sense, due to proximity, due to the time it takes to get the fabric delivered to the factory its more feasible to now consider acquiring raw fabric from our neighbouring countries as opposed to getting it only from China.”

Source: Phnom Penh Post (February 7, 2013)