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24-Aug-2005
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Posted: 23 May 2004 1403 hrs
Cambodia's crucial garment industry braces for end to quota system
PHNOM PENH : Cambodia's crucial garment sector is bracing for the end of a
30-year-old global textile quota system in December, hoping to position
itself as a
labour-friendly alternative to China.
The highly mobile garment manufacturing industry contributes more than 90
percent of Cambodia's export earnings and employs an estimated 240,000
mostly female workers, making it the linchpin of one of the world's poorest
economies.
The expiration of the multi-fibre agreement (MFA), which allocates textile
quotas to developing nations for export to rich countries and gave Cambodia
its entree into the global market, is expected to see giant China elbow out
competitors.
"We are very worried that by the end of the year when the agreement expires,
a lot of workers will lose their jobs and see their living standards fall,"
says Sam Srey
Mom, acting president of the prominent Free Trade Union of Workers of the
Kingdom of Cambodia.
Workers, most of whom have uprooted from villages in this predominantly
agricultural country in the hope of finding work, have few employment
options with no other established industry here.
They earn a minimum wage of 40 to 45 dollars per month under conditions
monitored via a unique factory inspection system set up by the UN's
International Labour Organisation (ILO).
The system was put in place following a 1999 agreement between Cambodia and
the United States which required the sector to improve working conditions in
return for receiving quotas to the US market.
Ken Loo, secretary general of the Garment Manufacturers Association in
Cambodia (GMAC), envisions survival in some form for the industry and says
Cambodia's
reputation could help give it an edge.
GMAC is working alongside the government in pushing for the United States,
the destination for two-thirds of Cambodia's exports, to reduce tariffs on
garments
exported from the impoverished country.
"With the abolishment of quotas we see that the only way they can continue
this system of reward and encouragement is by giving us preferential
treatment on
tariffs," Loo says.
The gold star may also help the industry in its lobbying for a reduction in
the 50 percent local content requirement by the European Union -- Cambodia's
other major importer -- for garments to be duty exempt.
Fabric and yarn used here is imported, due to a lack of local supply,
meaning local content is now 40 percent at the most, Loo says.
More generally, as demand in the West grows for goods produced under decent
conditions, investors could be attracted to the Cambodian scheme.
"Certainly the industry sees its compliance with international and national
labour law as a significant factor in its positioning in the post-MFA
world," says Ros
Harvey, chief technical advisor for the ILO garment sector project.
"What the industry's hope is, is that compliance will mean the industry is
attractive to buyers who are concerned with this issue."
Harvey also says that the ILO has collected strong evidence that improving
working conditions is more than just a marketing strategy. "It is a way for
a factory to
improve its productivity," she says.
Importantly, the system may give Cambodia an edge as it seeks to sell itself
as an alternative to China for investors nervous about a US "safeguard
mechanism", in
place until 2008 under World Trade Organisation rules, which if activated
would restrict China's garment exports.
"If buyers are afraid and they want to diversify, they do not want all their
orders to be in China just in case something like this happens, then they
have to choose
another country to place their orders," says Loo.
"We hope we can position Cambodia to be in that position, to be their number
one choice."
It is possible that some drift may have already occurred, with around 30
factories operated mostly by investors from China, Hong Kong and Taiwan
opening in Cambodia in the past year to bring the total number of active
factories here to 209.
GMAC has also been calling on Cambodia's government, infamously riven with
corruption and entangled in red tape, to get its act together or risk seeing
investors flee as early as September, when buyers place orders for next
year.
"The industry has been shouting, screaming our heads off, at the government
over the past two or three years, and we have not seen much movement," Loo
says.
"It's only this year that we've seen the hustle and bustle.... We just hope
it's not too little too late."
- AFP
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