Gender, Development, and Trade (International Development) - Softcover

 
9780855985325: Gender, Development, and Trade (International Development)

Synopsis

Women all over the world are increasingly employed - and exploited - at the far end of the global supply chain. Whether by picking fruit in Chile, processing cashews in Mozambique, sewing in Chinas Export Processing Zones, or providing biotech companies with indigenous knowledge in India, women’s labour and skill are crucial elements in the scaling up of globalised production processes. It might be argued that women benefit in terms of status and income from this trend, but what are the hidden costs of new trade regimes, and do they outweigh the benefits? What do women stand to lose from trade agreements on agricultural products, intellectual property, and the movement of migrant labour? Contributors to this volume show how women are finding ways to influence national and international trade policy agendas in developed countries and are joining forces in global forums to campaign for reforms. Authors include Nazneen Kanji, Pun Ngai, Peggy Ntseane, Marceline Suman Sahai, and Marceline White. Case studies are cited from a wide range of countries, including Australia, Botswana, China, Mexico, Mozambique, and Zimbabwe.

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Gender, Development, and Trade

By Maree Keating

Oxfam Publishing

Copyright © 2004 Oxfam GB
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-85598-532-5

Contents

Editorial Maree Keating, 2,
'Good jobs' and hidden costs: women workers documenting the price of precarious employment Thalia Kidder and Kate Raworth, 12,
Global trade and home work: closing the divide Annie Delaney, 22,
Women workers and precarious employment in Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, China Pun Ngai, 29,
Being a female entrepreneur in Botswana: cultures, values, strategies for success Peggy Ntseane, 37,
Look FIRST from a gender perspective: NAFTA and the FTAA Marceline White, 44,
Are trade agreements with the EU beneficial to women in Africa, the Caribbean, and the Pacific? Karin Ulmer, 53,
TRIPS and biodiversity: a gender perspective Suman Sahai, 58,
Women, trade, and migration Don Flynn and Eleonore Kofman, 66,
Gender, the Doha Development Agenda, and the post-Cancun trade negotiations Manama Williams, 73,
Corporate responsibility and women's employment: the case of cashew nuts Nazneen Kanji, 82,
Resources Compiled by Erin Leigh, 88,
Publications, 88,
Journals, 91,
Electronic resources, 91,
Tools and websites, 93,
Organisations, 94,


CHAPTER 1

'Good jobs' and hidden costs: women workers documenting the price of precarious employment

Thalia Kidder and Kate Raworth

This article describes the precarious terms and conditions of employment experienced by millions of women working in global supply chains in the food and garment industries, and describes the main forces leading to that precariousness. It then presents a typology of costs and determinants of precarious employment, in the form of a matrix, which serves as an analytical framework for documenting the hidden costs borne by women workers. Thirdly, the article presents some of the approaches used by Oxfam International and partner organisations to make calculations of those costs, including the challenges encountered. Lastly, the article suggests several ways in which the matrix could be used and some ideas for further research.


It has been frequently claimed that women workers are among the winners of globalisation. 'In praise of cheap labour: bad jobs at bad wages are better than no jobs at all' wrote the economist Paul Krugman, in response to critiques of employment terms and conditions in garment factories around the world (Krugman 1997, 1). Employed at the end of chains that supply fresh produce and garments to major retailers, many are earning cash incomes for the first time and often earning more than they would in alternative employment opportunities.

But there are often hidden costs for women who are employed in these labour-intensive trading sectors, because they are employed in precarious ways. Many are repeatedly hired on short-term contracts, paid by piece rate, lack social security or employment benefits, face long and erratic hours, and are at risk of sudden job loss. Poor management or gender relations have typically been blamed for precarious conditions; however, two other significant factors are shaping employment conditions: the sourcing and purchasing practices of retailers who demand low-cost, fast, and flexible production in their supply chains, and government policies and practices aiming to make the labour force more 'flexible' to meet these retailers' needs.

As part of an ongoing international campaign to 'Make Trade Fair', Oxfam International undertook research with partner organisations in 12 countries as a basis for campaigning for the rights of workers employed in global fresh-produce and garment supply chains. More than 1,300 workers – mostly women – were interviewed, as well as around 130 farm and factory managers, 50 supply-chain agents, 50 NGO and government officials, and 17 retail company representatives.

The aim was to produce evidence of the costs borne by workers as a result of retailers' sourcing and purchasing practices, and governments' labour policies and practices. In particular, we aimed to show the costs not only of poor working conditions but of insecure terms of employment which are shaped by the above factors. The motivation to make these costs explicit was threefold:

1 To reveal how workers are bearing the costs of being employed in supply chains which demand greater speed and flexibility, and how government policies weaken, or fail to enforce, national labour laws. Women workers effectively provide a subsidy to production under this business model, and pay the price of government trade strategies that rely on precarious jobs.

2 To provide policy makers with a fuller account of the monetary and non-monetary costs incurred by workers as a result of flexible labour-market policies and practices – in the same way that feminist economics has made calculations of the value of unpaid work, and environmental economics has estimated the costs of environmental degradation.

3 To provide women workers' organisations with an approach for systematically identifying these costs, so that they can propose ways of removing or reducing them, and hold decision-makers accountable.


Precarious employment in global supply chains

In both rich and poor countries, women are the ones who cut, sew, and pack clothing, pick and pack fruit, prune and cut flowers. Women constitute 65 per cent of the factory workforce in the Honduran garment industry, 85 per cent in Bangladesh, and 90 per cent in Cambodia. In the cut flower industry, women hold 65 per cent of the jobs in Colombia and 87 per cent in Zimbabwe. In the fruit industry, women constitute 69 per cent of temporary and seasonal workers in South Africa, and 52 per cent in Chile, while women hold only 26 per cent and 5 per cent of the long-term jobs in these countries, respectively. Ninety per cent of home-based workers in the UK are women (Dolan and Sorby 2003; Oxfam International 2004).

Women's over-representation in labour-intensive industries, and in the more precarious jobs within them, can be attributed to several factors. First, some factory and farm managers adhere to gender-stereotyped ideas that women employees are more dextrous for this 'hand work', more 'flexible' about performing endless repetitive and unskilled tasks, or more 'docile' and therefore less likely to make demands.

Second, more women than men may apply for precarious jobs: women's family responsibilities may leave them unable to turn down daily or temporary jobs, while men may travel in search of better opportunities. Likewise, seasonal or home work may produce fewer conflicts with women's family duties.

Third, the myth persists that women's jobs provide 'extra' income, perpetuating the rationale that it is less important for them to have a stable job, employment benefits, training opportunities, or promotion. In fact, our research affirmed that benefits such as paid leave time, health and maternity coverage, and regular hours are highly valued by women workers because it is precisely those benefits that enable them to balance their paid work with the responsibilities imposed upon them by gender roles for unpaid caring work in the home.

Lastly, women are over-represented in these jobs because there are few better alternatives available to them. 'May God bless the flowers, because they provide us with work,' say the women in Colombia's flower greenhouses (Oxfam International 2004,16). Burdened by school costs and medical expenses, women in poor families increasingly depend on earning cash incomes. Many hope to escape rural poverty, declining agricultural incomes, or subordinated family roles, migrating across provinces and countries to do so. And the crisis of HIV and AIDS makes some families all the more dependent on those who can work, increasing the need for their caring work too.

For many individual women, their jobs on farms and in factories have facilitated personal empowerment, and in some cases economic independence or greater equality in the household. But though these jobs are valued, they too frequently result in precarious terms of employment. Our research found workers' experiences of insecurity, excessive stress, and subordination particularly widespread among the women workers, the vast majority of whom are also the primary caregivers in the family.

Insecurity is a critical issue: women hired repeatedly on short-term contracts provide their employers with the expertise of permanent workers, while systematically being denied access to the benefits of long-term employees. Erratic and excessive overtime forces women to rearrange childcare at short notice, often while being underpaid for these hours. Excessive stress is endemic, and short-term gains turn into long-term losses for workers who get burned out, often ending up with short working lives. Women are typically subordinated through segregation into the low-paid, low-skill jobs, sexual harassment, or intimidation for involvement in union organising.

These factors interact with and exacerbate one another. Workers on insecure contracts have weaker bargaining positions in the workplace, are less able to demand their rights, and are more exposed to excessive production pressures, intimidation, and harassment.


Forces shaping precarious employment

What are the causes of these precarious terms and conditions of employment? Commonly cited and significant causes include gender stereotypes and poor farm and factory management. Yet two other forces play an increasingly influential role: the purchasing practices of retailers, and governments' labour policies. Food and clothing retailers source their products through extensive global supply chains, with a very strong negotiating position over their suppliers. This enables them to dictate terms and conditions of supply and to create the low-cost, flexible supply chain that they seek. Farm and factory managers interviewed in our research confirmed the increasing pressure from retailers in demanding faster production at shorter notice, more flexibility in order size and spacing, higher quality standards, and tighter specification of the inputs to be used – all at stagnant or falling prices. In the Sri Lankan garment industry, for example, production times have typically fallen from 90 to 45 days over the last three years, while prices to some suppliers have fallen 35 per cent in 18 months (Oxfam International 2004).

Employers in turn pass these pressures on to their workers (Figure 1). Demands for faster delivery – enforced through fines for missing deadlines – turn into excessive overtime for workers, who are forced to stay until the order is completed. 'We have a very young workforce of women,' explained one garment factory manager in Morocco. 'At times the women have to stay up working all night, and they understand perfectly the need for that flexibility' (Oxfam International 2004, 53). Likewise, falling prices are passed on to workers in the form of high production targets and low piece-rate pay; erratic and short-notice orders result in short-term hiring for workers. In effect, the flexibility gained by retailers at the top of the chain results in precarious employment for the women at the bottom of it.

Government policies and practices are too often geared to accommodating, rather than preventing, these excessive supply-chain pressures. Many governments routinely fail to implement existing labour laws, either constrained by a lack of resources or desirous of creating more flexible labour practices without changing the law. One labour inspector in Bangalore's garment factories told researchers, 'We have received instructions from above to be lenient in these inspections, as these factories are contributing to the economic growth of the state' (Oxfam International 2004,63). The failure to protect trade union rights, and sometimes their active sabotage, is particularly damaging, since it undermines workers' ability to defend their rights themselves.

Some governments weaken national labour laws to make the labour market more 'flexible' through easier hiring and firing, extended limits on overtime, and increasing the use of temporary contracts. This trend is effectively converting once-illegal excesses into legal and accepted practices. In Colombia in 2002, for example, labour law reforms lengthened the working day, cut overtime pay premiums, reduced severance pay, and introduced more flexible contracts. In Indonesia, new legislation in 2003 normalised the previously unregulated use of short-term contracts. Research in 12 shoe, garment, and metal-goods factories in West Java found between 15 and 95 per cent of workers repeatedly hired on three- to twelve-month contracts, despite their employment in jobs not temporary or seasonal by nature. Likewise in the UK, a long-established loophole in the law allows home-based workers to be paid only 80 per cent of the national minimum wage (Oxfam International 2004).

Many governments are effectively creating a two-tier labour force within the formal economy. In the top tier, employers and the state take responsibility for covering the costs of maintaining a healthy workforce. Compensation ensures that workers are rested and ready for work (through paid leave time), receive a living wage for reasonable working hours, as well as time and expenses to stay healthy (through sick leave and health and accident coverage), and life-cycle needs such as maternity leave and pensions. In the bottom tier, by contrast, jobs are atomised, with employers limiting remuneration to 'production delivered' or 'time actually at work'. By not providing employment benefits, employers and the state are shirking their responsibilities for covering the real costs of creating a healthy, productive society — and women as carers are paying the price.


Defining the hidden costs of precarious employment

Precarious conditions of employment generate many hidden costs for women workers. We refer to these costs as 'hidden' for several reasons. Some are not explicitly recognised by workers to be costs, because they lack information about their rightful benefits under law, or because the costs materialise only in the longer term. Such costs are usually missing from official statistics of export-oriented employment produced by economists and policy makers. In addition, some costs are implicit subsidies of the true cost of production, because women workers are forced to pay out of their own pockets or forgo their rightful earnings.

In order to capture the full range of the hidden costs faced by workers in these sectors, we created a matrix (Figure 2) which brings together various contexts that determine the costs, and the different forms of costs incurred. We developed this matrix towards the end of our research process and then understood the usefulness of such an analytical tool. We hope it may be of use or inspiration to other researchers and women's organisations addressing these issues.

We have defined four broad categories of 'contextual determinants'. First, community relations, such as networks providing childcare and credit, may be weakened when women have little time to participate. Likewise, women's social status may suffer from negative community perceptions: in Sri Lanka, for example, some marriage advertisements in newspapers say 'Garment women, please do not reply' (Oxfam International 2004, 28). Second, household relations that determine child-care roles and expectations may influence the redistribution of entitlements within a household once a woman takes on paid work. Male family members who formerly provided women with income support may withdraw it when women start to earn cash (Elson 1999). Third, labour-law enforcement and compliance determine, for example, access to maternity leave or health insurance. Employers are responsible for compliance with the law, but governments are ultimately responsible for the law's enforcement. The two interact closely and therefore in this framework they are combined. Lastly, supply-chain pressures of short production times, flexible and erratic orders, and low prices push many costs and risks of production on to managers, who pass them on to workers.

We have identified four forms of hidden costs for women workers that result from these contextual determinants. First, out-of-pocket costs: money paid out for goods and services required as a result of precarious terms of employment. Workers may expect to pay for bus fares to work or for lunch at work, but not for phone calls home or taxis late at night as a result of overtime at short notice. Likewise, workers may expect to pay for their rent when they migrate to find a job, but not for a doctor's visit when health contributions are deducted from their salaries. The second form of hidden costs is income and benefits forgone: rightful income and benefits not received, such as unpaid overtime or maternity leave. Third are human development costs in terms of ill-health due to poor working environment and inadequate time to spend with the family as a result of excessive overtime. Lastly are the costs to equity and self-esteem as a result of more unequal gender relations or intimidation in the workplace which undermine an individual's sense of self-worth.

The following quotes demonstrate the variety of hidden costs borne by women workers. The matrix provides a useful tool not only for documenting those already known, but for raising awareness about those that have not yet been identified.


(Continues...)
Excerpted from Gender, Development, and Trade by Maree Keating. Copyright © 2004 Oxfam GB. Excerpted by permission of Oxfam Publishing.
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