While you’re here… help us stay here.
Are you enjoying open access to policy and research published by a broad range of organisations? Please donate today so that we can continue to provide this service.
The COVID-19 pandemic plunged the fashion industry into turmoil, as supply chain disruptions and store closures threatened the profits of the world’s biggest brands. The response of the fashion industry was abrupt. International brands took immediate action to cut costs - cancelling and delaying billions of dollars of clothing orders from factories in countries like Bangladesh and Cambodia. At the other end of the supply chain, mass layoffs pushed garment workers into crisis as poverty and hunger grew.
Nearly two years on, while many fashion brands have returned to profitability, the situation for garment workers remains dire and the road to recovery long. Through interviews with over 200 garment workers in Bangladesh and Cambodia, this report provides evidence of the daily realities for the mostly women workers in the sector, who have been left wearing the cost of the COVID-19 pandemic.
It is an urgent reminder that the decisions made by fashion brands in Australia, and other wealthy countries, have very real consequences for the workers toiling day in day out in garment factories around the world. When their profits were on the line, the response from fashion brands was swift, and the consequences for garment workers catastrophic. With the pandemic shining a new light on an industry already plagued by exploitation, it is beyond time for fashion brands to take real action to provide fair wages and decent working conditions for the women making their clothes.
Key findings: