Sunday, January 17, 2016

NYU's “Beyond the Tip of the Iceberg” makes deceitful statements about Bangladesh RMG Industry (BRMGI)

Bangladesh RMG Industry (BRMGI) is completely export-oriented one and comprises very deep multidimensional impacts on country’s moving economy. Hence, this strategic sector’s foreign currency earnings accounts for 81.70 per cent of total export earnings of Bangladesh during the fiscal year (FY) 2015 which in monetary term amounted US$ 25.49 billion. Moreover at the same time, Knitwear Sector earnings from export amounted US$ 13.26 billion which holds 49.13 per cent export earning share of total RMG earnings indicating this sector’s competitiveness and classy presence in the world market of homogenous kind.
This write-up intends to reveal how the NYU’s research titled “Beyond the Tip of the Iceberg: Bangladesh’s Forgotten Apparel Workers” went wrong on the pre-assumed biased hypothesis, which are as follows,

1.     Bangladesh itself has a very big domestic market for clothing which is dominantly met by domestic ‘Clothes Tailoring Industry (CTI)’ and ‘Bangladeshi Local Retail Brands (BLRB)’: 

     NYU’s study completely subsided this fact and failed to understand that Bangladesh itself is market for around 160 million people[1] and naturally occupies a very high aggregated demand for ready-made clothing. Bangladesh imports a little from abroad still now, despite it has recently reached at the status of ‘lower-middle income class.[2]’ The relevant data is given below (See Table 1),


Table 1: Import expenditure of Bangladesh on HS-Code 61 and 62; Data Source: ITC Trade map, 2016.
Product code
Product label
Value in 2012
(‘000 US$)
Value in 2013
(‘000 US$)
Value in 2014
(‘000 US$)
'61
Articles of apparel, accessories, knit or crochet
92866
185636
119911
'62
Articles of apparel, accessories, not knit or crochet
116684
150987
202772

According to UNICEF, Bangladesh has almost 100 million people[3] who are above 18 years of age and 52.75 per cent[4] of this population is male indicating that total male citizen of Bangladesh is approximately 57.25 million (note: calculated by the author, E. H. Latifee, 2016 based on the data collected), now with this reference if we find out the per-head import-expenditure on HS-Code 61 and 62 respectively, we find the situation as revealed in the Table 2 below,

Table 2: Per-head (Male) yearly import expenditure on Knit and Woven RMG made for males. Data Calculation: E. H. Latifee, 2016 by using Table 1 and population info expressed above.
Product code
Product label
Per-head Value in 2012
Per-head Value in 2013
Per-head Value in 2014
'61
Articles of apparel, accessories, knit or crochet
1.760492891
3.519165877
2.273194313
'62
Articles of apparel, accessories, not knit or crochet
2.212018957
2.862312796
3.844018957

From the Table 2 it is very clear that at the Calendar Year 2014, for Bangladeshi male, import expenditure of HS Code 61 and 62 were only US$ 2.27 and US$ 3.84, whether the HS Code 61’s manufacturing price is around US$ 3.19 and HS Code 62’s is US$ 5 per unit of production on average- it rationalizes that Bangladesh still does not import Knit or Woven clothes from abroad at large scale indicating that ‘Clothes Tailoring Industry (CTI)’ of Bangladesh and ‘Bangladeshi Local Retail Brands (BLRB)’ fill up the huge domestic demand for RMG.


2.     The photos that NYU Stern’s study used was from Keraniganj, where only domestic demand filling ‘Clothes Tailoring Industry (CTI)’ related businesses are present but no export-oriented factory is there and by showing those pictures the study tried to showcase fallaciously that export-oriented Bangladesh RMG Industry (BRMGI) is also like that:

One of the pictures (See Photo 1) that NYU Sterns study used taken from Keraniganj which is concentrated business area for Clothing Tailoring Industry (CTI) meeting only domestic demand is completely different from and have no association with export oriented Bangladesh RMG Industry.

Photo 1: Comparative scenario of local CTI and BRMGI; Source: Left one- from BKMEA recent photo collecting activities and the right one- from NYU’s paper.


BKMEA monitors environmental, productivity and quality, fire and electrical, structural and labour health-wage, workplace elated matters of its’ member factories time to time, still it has not found any factory having the scenario that NYU’s photo depicted, rather NYU’s research took it from Keraniganj which place is used by CTI business only to meet domestic demand for ready-made clothing but not associated with export at any level.


3.     ‘Clothes Tailoring Industry (CTI)’ of Bangladesh and ‘Bangladeshi Local Retail Brands (BLRB)’ get knowledge about new fashion trend either collecting photos from internet or by observing consumers’ preferences through their set up shops:

Perhaps, NYU Stern research team got confused by seeing look-alike RMG products at those CTI factories situated in Keraniganj which are actually inferior in quality and there are defects on those products, but later they amalgamated those products falsely with export-quality products. But the reality is, CTI does not have the technological advancements to meet the buyers’ demand for RMG-product perfectly with the quality a world-class brand needs. Rather, BLRB sometimes fetch quality fabrics from abroad and provides design and fabric to CTI for stitching it, and local customers cannot catch the difference in stitching with normal eye-view. Sometimes it happens, CTI readies shirts or T-shirts which look-alike export-oriented RMGs but they source fabric from very cheap sources and those fabric fail to qualify international standard even, but as if those are cheap, that is why local Bangladeshi low-medium earning people buy those.
Moreover, if BRMGI coined export oriented factory’s production gets rejected from buyers then they sell it to the local wholesalers as there is a provision in National Industrial Policy 2010 for 100 per cent export oriented industry stating that they can sell 20 per cent of their manufactured products by paying due taxes and duties- this also work as a way for CTI and BLRB to copy export-quality RMG designs and by modifying those a bit, later they produces RMGs for meeting local demands only.


4.     In applicable cases, subcontracting is prefixed by the buyers expressed in the LC opened and no manufacturer and exporter can violate it as there are auditing teams to monitor at different steps:

 Subcontracting is a usual process in world businesses and can be done by any firm with other firm being under laws and regulations[5], and by satisfying contracts made with buyers. However, firstly, BRMGI businesses usually do not subcontract as if they have capacity to meet buyers’ quantity demanded, but depending on the orders they scale down their productivity sometimes and excel up productivity further when orders come frequently. And secondly, if even subcontracting is needed, then RMG manufacturers and exporters are given with set of conditions from the end of buyers expressing with which factories they can go for subcontracting and what standards the subcontracted factories should be meeting for must. These two-fold premises reject the core hypothesis that NYU Stern’s study drew that BRMGI subcontracts with CTI who are not directly connected to export.
Hence, the research publication titled “Beyond the Tip of the Iceberg: Bangladesh’s Forgotten Apparel Workers”, published by NYU Stern Center for Business and Human Rights may have good intentions to protect the labour rights but had conducted the research activities under above mentioned title by pre-assuming that labourers of this phenomenal industry is in very pity-risky condition which is completely invalid that is illustrated here briefly, however the biased stance of that study led to a fallacious concluding remarks full of false linking and fatal contradictions with the reality existing here within. Despite these, Bangladesh RMG Industry eyes on achieving US$ 50 billion target by 2021 which is one of the visionary heartfelt attainable goals of present dynamic government to reach at.

The writer, Enamul Hafiz Latifee, Senior Assistant Secretary, Research and Development (R&D) Cell, Bangladesh Knitwear Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BKMEA).


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