Despite pledging zero tolerance against overseas factories that scorn fair labor and safety practices, according to a New York Times investigation published Sunday, the United States federal government, “one of the world’s biggest clothing buyers,” spends over $1.5 billion a year purchasing items from reported sweatshops.
According to a series of interviews and audits obtained by the Times, American government suppliers frequently purchase military apparel, federal employee uniforms and other supplies from companies with reported safety violations and harsh working conditions including padlocked fire exits, buildings at risk of collapse, falsified wage records, underage workers, worker intimidation and, in some cases, torture.
“[Federal agencies] exert less oversight of foreign suppliers than many retailers do,” writes Times reporter Ian Urbina. “And there is no law prohibiting the federal government from buying clothes produced overseas under unsafe or abusive conditions.”
Speaking to a number of federal procurement officials, Gordon notes that supposed “free-trade” agreements and low-cost-above-all-else mandates have incentivized the federal government away from pushing for fair labor reform or buying practices.
He writes:
An international fair labor law “doesn’t exist for the exact same reason that American consumers still buy from sweatshops,” Daniel Gordon, a former top federal procurement official, told the New York Times. “The government cares most about getting the best price.”
Listing just some of the infractions, Urbina continues:
Like many western retailers including Walmart and H&M who have been condemned for their support of international sweatshops, federal procurement officials cite the industry practice of hiring suppliers, or middlemen who purchase from factories on the retailers’ behalf, as reason for the difficulty in policing their global supply chain.
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On Monday it was reported that police in Bangladesh filed the first charges against the owners of the Tazreen Fashion Ltd. garment factory where a November 2012 factory fire killed over 100 workers.
Bloomberg News reports:
Following that fire, inspectors found among the charred remains order forms for apparel with Marine Corps logos.
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