H&M has surpassed goal to provide fair wages to workers
The H&M group has announced that its initiative to provide fair
wages to the textile industry has now reached nearly one million
workers. Since 2013, the multi-brand conglomerate has been carrying
out its Fair Living Wage strategy. Originally presented in Berlin, the
approach is based on the simple conclusion that workers should earn a
wage that they can live on, and the realization that the company has a
responsibility to influence the process of fair living wages.
“Wages are one of the greatest challenges in the textile industry,”
H&M said in a statement. “We are very proud to have reached and
exceeded our very first milestone on this journey. The work we do at
factory level – to create the foundation and processes for fair living
wages – has grown from covering three factories in 2013 to now
reaching 655 factories employing more than 930,000 garment
workers.”
Read more on H&M’s pledge to improve worker’s rights:
Back in 2013, the H&M group had outlined a five-year plan for its
Fair Living Wage initiative. By the end of this year, the company
hoped to implement improved wage management systems for suppliers and
to empower garment workers by ensuring that each worker had an elected
worker representative in each factory the company works with in
Bangladesh.
A few months before the H&M group first announced the Fair Living
Wage plan in November of 2013, global attention was brought textile
workers’ poor working circumstance when the Rana Plaza factory just
outside of Bangladesh collapsed, killing 1,100 people.
H&M pushes for fair wages in textile industry
Responses to the Rana Plaza tragedy, like that of H&M, are the
first step in empowering textile workers and allowing them fair
working environments worldwide. “From the very beginning, we knew that
the shared challenges connected to wages would require collaboration,”
the statement read. “The industry must come together to find solutions
beneficial to all garment workers and factories.”
In the past five years, the H&M group’s Fair Living Wage strategy
has helped 500 factories across ten countries to implement improved
wage management systems, covering 635,000 garment workers.
Additionally, 594 factories across ten countries have been assisted in
bringing out democratically elected worker representatives, covering
840,000 workers.
“As an industry, we have a shared responsibility to ensure that the
jobs created in emerging markets lead to better lives for the people
and communities involved. The results of our work in creating the
foundation for fair living wages are exceeding our expectations,
reaching close to a million garment workers. Now, the work continues –
together with the rest of the industry,” said Anna Gedda, Head of
Sustainability at the H&M group.
Photos: Courtesy of H&M