Showing posts with label Slowdown in garment sector. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Slowdown in garment sector. Show all posts

Sunday, July 13, 2008

Apparel Slowdown: Cambodian garment workers worry about future prospects

PHNOM PENH, July 13, 2008 (AFP) - Sath Vanny sits anxiously at the door to her tiny one-room hut in the factory district of Cambodia's capital.

She left her hometown in the southern province of Takeo seven years ago to work at a women's shirt factory, sending most of her earnings back to help the family farm.

But a slowdown in orders has the 25-year-old worried about her job.

Overtime work has fallen off as Cambodia's textile sector, the country's biggest industrial employer, struggles against stiffer global competition and slowing demand.

More than 10 Chinese-owned factories have moved to cheaper markets, leaving hundreds of thousands of garment workers -- mostly young women like Vanny who support their impoverished families -- facing destitution.

"I was told that we didn't have as many orders as we used to, but with the basic wage I don't have money to send to my parents," says Vanny, who now earns less than 60 dollars per month.

"I can't imagine living without a factory job. I am so worried about my family," she adds, wiping away tears.

The garment industry earns 80 percent of Cambodia's foreign exchange earnings and employs an estimated 350,000 people in more than 300 factories.

The industry thrived after a unique labour-friendly deal with the United States in the 1990s.

Under the deal, Cambodia passed new labour laws, encouraged labour unions and allowed the International Labour Organisation (ILO) to inspect factories and publish its findings.

In turn, the United States cut tariffs on Cambodian garment exports, buying 70 percent of all of the country's textiles.

Cambodia maintained its higher working conditions after the deal expired in 2005, and garment-making has made the economy one of the fastest growing in the region. But it does not look built to last.

The industry grew only 8.0 percent last year after suffering a dismal fourth quarter that saw orders plummet by nearly half, according to the World Bank. It previously enjoyed growth of up to 20 percent.

Apparel exports have declined since October, mainly due to the US economic slowdown, according to Cambodia's commerce ministry.

Exports to the United States slipped 1.44 percent in the first quarter, compared with the same period last year, to some 500 million dollars, it added.

Meanwhile factory owners are looking abroad for greater productivity and lower costs, says Cambodia's Free Trade Union (FTU).

Sok Vannak, who has been working at a factory for almost 10 years, says her Chinese bosses often threaten to move the factory to Vietnam, where costs are cheaper.

"They warn us all the time. I'm afraid that it could come true," says the 27-year-old.

"I have no land to farm. Without the factory we will have a hard time surviving," Vannak says.

Garments are a shifting industry, says Kaing Monika, manager at the Garment Manufacturers Association of Cambodia. Many manufacturers could move to Vietnam, Bangladesh or India, he adds.

"Production costs -- oil and power -- are high in Cambodia, and the demand for higher wages also put the country's garment industry in danger," he says.

Factory owners complain about a proliferation of labour unions and illegal strikes, but workers say they merely want proper wages.

About 27,000 garment workers have quit in the last year in search of higher pay, according the FTU.

Some have gone to look for work in rural areas where the cost of living is lower, while others have found work at karaoke parlours where they're in danger of falling into prostitution, says FTU president Chea Mony.

Next year will bring even more competition when US restrictions on Chinese textile exports are scheduled to end.

"China and Vietnam are still our direct competitors, and so far we have nothing special to offer buyers. That is why we're very concerned," says Oum Mean, of Cambodia's labour ministry.

"To counter this competition, we must increase productivity, quality and extend our reputation as having high labour standards," he says.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Asian garment makers tailor their plans to meet falling US demand

February 11 2008
By Raphael Minder, Amy Yee, Amy Kazmin, Tom Mitchell and,Robin Kwong
Financial Times (UK)


An expected downturn in US clothing demand is adding to the woes of Asian garment makers already struggling because of rising costs and stronger currencies.

In China, which just three years ago was entangled in a trade dispute with the US and the European Union over export quotas, concerns have switched to the spiralling costs that are eroding its competitive advantage.

"Costs are hitting us," says Henry Tan, chief executive of Luen Thai, a large Hong Kong-based manufacturer with operations in China. "Sales to Europe are not so bad because the euro is strong, but sales to the US are very difficult."

Chinese manufacturers have been facing double-digit annual wage increases over the past few years. More recently their headache has come from the renminbi's appreciation, which Beijing has allowed to gather pace this year as it seeks to curb inflation.

Manufacturers now "have to compete on brand rather than on volume", says Chen Wenjiang, president of Haining Grand Double Eagle Garments, a leather-jacket maker based in China's eastern Zhejiang province.

Garment makers face a similar challenge in India, where an appreciation of the rupee that started last year has seen an estimated 500,000 jobs - out of a total workforce of 55m - cut in the textiles industry, the country's second-largest em-ployer after agriculture.

Since September Indian exports to the US have slowed by 5-6 per cent. This makes it likely the government will miss its initial $160bn (€110bn, £82bn) export forecast for the fiscal year ending in March, according to G. Bujpal, at the commerce ministry.

The slowdown has emboldened the clothing industry in its calls for government relief. A proposal to give tax refunds to exporters and reduce interest rates on loans is under consideration, as is a government plan to create special investment regions for textiles and open more training institutes.

The difficulties are also spreading to smaller Asian garment producers such as Cambodia and Bangladesh, which until recently had been riding a textiles boom.

And some observers are predicting the troubles will yield a shake-out in the textiles sector.

More factory closures will cause pain in the short term, but will help ensure that "the balance of power will shift and we may get more bargaining position", says Ken Loo, secretary-general of the garment manufacturers' association in Cambodia.

Furthermore, a switch away from the old quota system, under World Trade Organisation rules, has allowed buyers to move to what has become known as "reverse bidding", where factories in different countries compete for orders by offering the lowest price, says an official from the International Labour Organisation.

The export downturn is affecting working patterns. In the Indian textile hub of Tirupur, which has as many as 800 export-oriented factories that have already introduced steep job cuts, the working week is now down to four or five days, from the traditional six, because of falling orders, says Arumugam Sakthivel, vice-president of the Federation of Indian Export Organisations (FIEO).

Orders are shifting from India to Asian rivals such as Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Vietnam and Thailand, according to the FIEO.

US buyers could accelerate this transfer of production to lower-cost centres, according to executives, as any downturn in domestic retail demand will force them to reconsider their cost structures.

"China's costs are going up, so perhaps some US companies will take a closer look at Vietnam and other Asian countries and decide to get less of their supplies from China," says Barry Chan, a partner in a manufacturer that has annual turnover of $100m, 70 per cent of which gets exported to US customers such as Liz Claiborne and Old Navy.

But not everybody can afford to switch overnight, especially for more upmarket brands, where quality controls are almost as important as costs, warns Ricardo Carreira, a Los Angeles-based partner in Chesler & Associates, a supplier of Chinese textiles to US companies.

While Wal-Mart and other general retailers could reduce orders from China by a few percentage points this year, he believes that kind of reduction is unfeasible for design or contemporary fashion suppliers.

"Sure, everybody is now worried and trying to squeeze down the factories for lower prices. But eventually there's a limit," Mr Carreira says. "Retailers have solid partnerships and real infrastructure in China, and you can't just walk away from that."

Asian garment producers, meanwhile, are trying to wean themselves from US demand and the dollar by targeting instead stronger economies such as Australia and denominating trade to Europe in euros.

But relief for producers may be most likely to come from domestic markets, especially for Chinese producers that can start supplying more affluent consumers at home, rather than abroad.

Haining Grand Double Eagle exports 80 per cent of its output, says Mr Chen. But "in five years' time we will be exporting only 20 per cent overseas and selling 80 per cent in China".

Reporting by Raphael Minder, Amy Yee, Amy Kazmin, Tom Mitchell and Robin Kwong

Friday, February 08, 2008

Garment Workers Worry Over US Economy

By Sok Khemara, VOA Khmer
Washington
07 February 2008



Exports of Cambodia’s chief commodity, garments, could fall sharply in 2008, leading to widespread concern among workers, a labor leader said Thursday.

Chea Mony, president of the Free Trade Union of Workers in the Kingdom of Cambodia, was on “Hello VOA” Thursday to discuss the implications and possible causes of the fall.

Commerce Minister Cham Prasidh said he was concerned about a potential drop in orders, thanks to a slow down in the US economy.

Cambodia’s growing economy is held up by garment manufacturing and tourism.