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Phasing out of MFA and its Impact on Workers

Phasing out of MFA and its Impact on Workers . 1 Background. Better Factories. What is it? Anyone heard of it? 5 mins brainstorm. Cambodia. 13 million people 260 000 workers 80% of Cambodia’s exports 230 factories 70% owned by Chinese speakers 70% exports to US

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Phasing out of MFA and its Impact on Workers

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  1. Phasing out of MFA and its Impact on Workers

  2. 1 Background

  3. Better Factories • What is it? • Anyone heard of it? 5 mins brainstorm

  4. Cambodia • 13 million people • 260 000 workers • 80% of Cambodia’s exports • 230 factories • 70% owned by Chinese speakers • 70% exports to US • Per capita income is US$27 per month • Average garment wage = US$72 per month • Directly supporting 1 million people • 30 – 50% salary sent home to family

  5. Objective • Increased firm level compliance with Cambodian and international labour law = better working conditions for workers = reduce poverty = win:win:win:win

  6. Background • 1999 US Cambodian Trade Agreement • Quota access for compliance • Possible 18% increase • ILO executing agency to monitor and report • Project January 2001 • USDOL funding, GMAC, Govt • Govt links export license to registration with the project

  7. Discussion point • Why do you think that the project was controversial when it started?

  8. Description overview

  9. Remediation cycle Capacity Building Suggestions

  10. Role of unions • Members of PAC • Mainstreaming social dialogue • Monitoring • Training • Resources • Direct support

  11. Video discussion point List things you want to know or discuss

  12. Monitoring How it works

  13. Monitoring • 6 teams • unannounced visits • Agreed checklist over 500 items • interviews management, workers and unions • Falsification checking

  14. Discussion point • Contact with auditing firms? • Do they talk with union leaders? • Impressions?

  15. Monitoring reports • 15 synthesis reports • Each factory given a report • Buyers can request reports • Monitoring plus • Factories named • independent, transparent and credible

  16. Key aspects of the labour law • Handout – see fact sheet about the industry • Discussion point – how does this compare to factories in your country?

  17. Key findings • Handout 1 • Discussion point – how does this compare to factories in your country?

  18. Supplementary research • Harassment • Personal security • Health and OSH • Breastfeeding • Dispute resolution

  19. World Bank Survey of Buyers on Labour Standards • #1 for deciding to source from a country • Cambodia #1 compared to competitors • 60% - labour standards equal or more important that price, quality and lead times • 86% - moderate to critical importance to consumers in the future • ILO monitoring highly credible • See fact sheet

  20. Post quota • See fact sheet • Still early days • Buyers consolidating • Price, quality, lead times and compliance

  21. Training approach

  22. Role of unions • Training reference group • Joint training • Offer separate support to unions • Tri-partite delivery in some training • Mainstream social dialogue

  23. All Better Factories Cambodia training is: • Usually joint management and union • Adult-centered • Action-based • Conducted in a safe and supportive environment • Multi-lingual (depending on target group)

  24. Different levels • Modular training • Single issues • Induction training • Factory based training

  25. Modular • 20 factories • 7 modules (Globalization, Workplace Cooperation, Quality, OSH, Productivity, HR and continuous improvement) • PICC • Factory action plans • 2 plus one training • Document

  26. Outcomes of trial • Case Study • Currently tracking indicators

  27. Single issues • Modules offered separately • Working time • Induction training skills • First aid • Sexual harassment

  28. Kit for HR managers • 15 minute video • Comic books • Training kit • Train HR managers

  29. Factory Based Training • Targeted to young women with low literacy • Soap opera style • Supported by comic books • Tri-partite delivery • Show on TV

  30. Discussion point • Positives and negatives of joint management/union training • Does training mean changed behavior? Pairs and report back

  31. Resources Making them available

  32. Guide to the labour law

  33. Website

  34. Good Practice Sheet

  35. Newsletter

  36. OSH Manual

  37. Industry Post MFA Strategy • Market niche of good labour standards • Reduce corruption • Trade facilitation • Improve business environment • Improve quality and productivity • Improve skill levels • Increase Khmer management expertise Labour standards is not enough

  38. Project strategy • Refocusing to providing info to international buyers to inform sourcing decisions • Increased emphasis on remediation • Reducing duplication of monitoring • Building business case • Self sufficient national organization by 2009

  39. Information Management System • presentation

  40. handover Current Agreed Sustainability Strategy transition 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010

  41. Lessons Learnt Engaging with CSR

  42. Industry… What matters is: • Price • Quality • Lead times • Compliance with labour standards • Innovation and whole service

  43. Context • Improving working conditions key to pro-poor development • CSR and monitoring will grow • Monitoring is not enough • Must support freedom to organize and collectively bargain

  44. Buyers • Engagement of buyers is critical • Not all buyers are the same • Important leverage point • Quality of buyer audits and engagement varies • Risks involved

  45. Progam design • Independent, credible and transparent • Strong government and buyer support • Use local staff • Mainstream social dialogue • Incentives and enforcement • National or geographical approach • Tri-partite approach • Reduce duplication of monitoring • Engage with buyers and other stakeholders • Emphasis on training and improvement • Consider language

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