Safer Overseas Factories Elusive - says Walmart [View all]
About a year and a half before a fire at a clothing factory in Bangladesh killed 112 people in November, executives from Wal-Mart, Gap and other big retailers met nearby to discuss ways to prevent the unsafe working conditions that have made such tragedies common.
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Discussions seemed promising. Then, on the second day, Sridevi Kalavakolanu, director of ethical sourcing for Wal-Mart Stores Inc., spoke up. In most cases very extensive and costly modifications would need to be undertaken to some factories, Kalavakolanu was quoted as saying in the minutes of the meeting obtained by the Associated Press. It is not financially feasible
to make such investments.
The statement from the worlds largest retailer, with $447 billion in annual revenue, essentially sucked the air out of the room, witnesses said. It also set the tone for the rest of the meeting, which ended the next day without a single company agreeing to the plan.
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Retailers often claim they know little or nothing about conditions at factories, because the long and intricate manufacturing chain runs through several contractors and subcontractors. Wal-Mart and others whose garments were found in the ruins of the fatal Tazreen Fashions Ltd. on Nov. 24 say they had severed ties with the factory or were unaware their clothes were being produced there.
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Here.
Know little or nothing about conditions? Can't find them? A City University professor points out that if their is a button problem or crooked seams they can find them in 2 days...
But the spokesperson gives a hint, that a strategy of making it more expensive not to fix it might work, among others...