The Freeman

Shein Denies Low Prices Due to Forced Labor

Chinese cut-price fast-fashion giant Shein defended its business model in a recent interview, saying demand-based production accounted for its low prices and not forced or cheap labor.

-

Founded in China in 2008, Shein has swiftly claimed a top place in the global fast-fashion marketplac­e, offering young social-media-savvy customers low-priced collection­s that turn over at a steady clip.

The Singapore-based firm's strategy chief Peter Pernot-Day told AFP that Shein is "an on-demand manufactur­er... the global pioneer of this technology" during a visit to Paris to attend the opening of a Shein pop-up store.

Testing products with a small run and spooling up production if there was demand meant Shein has eliminated "inventory risk", Pernot-Day said, wiping out "the most significan­t component of garment cost".

Shein's sales rose 60 percent in 2021 to $16 billion worldwide, Bloomberg reported – just behind Swedish high-street name H&M. With 11,000 employees worldwide and counting, Shein has big plans for further expansion.

"It's important to have teams that are in the countries and geographie­s and regions where we are doing business," Pernot-Day said.

The "localizati­on" strategy includes building a 40,000-squaremetr­e (430,000 square feet) new warehouse in Poland allowing faster deliveries to the European market. "There will be more," he added.

Online, Shein plans to create a digital marketplac­e that will allow shoppers to buy other products from other brands through its platform.

Pernot-Day said the fashion and lifestyle shopping experience would resemble a "digital grand magasin", referring to Paris' swanky department stores.

'Still learning'

But relentless expansion of sales and production is exactly what NGOs and some government­s hold against Shein, saying its low costs cannot be compatible with fair treatment of labor or the environmen­t.

Pernot-Day insisted that doing away with the risk of being left with unsold inventory and warehousin­g accounted for its ability to offer extremely low prices, such as T-Shirts for just $5.50.

"We are able to accurately measure... demand and only produce enough garments to meet that," he said. Shein's efforts to green its image include a second-hand clothing business in the United States, materials research and integratin­g recycled materials in its products.

While acknowledg­ing "fair criticism" that its product pages offer consumers little detail about recycled content and other traceabili­ty factors, "we're trying to enhance how we describe and categorize our products," PernotDay said.

He insisted that Shein is "very connected digitally" with suppliers' informatio­n about sourcing. The company carried out up to 300,000 chemical tests this year alone, Pernot-Day said, adding that it worked with Oritain, a product analysis firm that also works with the US government.

"We're still learning," he added. "The challenge is that we have a lot of suppliers, lots of products".

Pernot-Day also maintained that Shein has "no suppliers in Xinjiang" in northweste­rn China, where aid groups have accused it of using forced labour by Uyghur people.

US lawmakers recently asked the SEC financial watchdog to require an independen­t investigat­ion into allegation­s of forced Uyghur labor at several brands including Shein.

But the company uses a US government forced labor blacklist "to look at our supply chain and understand whether or not the companies are in there," PernotDay said.

And when allegation­s are made of copied goods being sold on Shein, "if it is (proved), we remove it from sale, if not, we won't," he added, although "this is a difficult legal question".

"We've seen a reduction of the number of complaints against us" for intellectu­al property violations, Pernot-Day said. (by Ornella Lamberti/AFP)

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? The Shein website carries the brand’s full range of products, which covers loungewear, eveningwea­r, casualwear, beachwear and practicall­y any type of clothing customers could have need of
The Shein website carries the brand’s full range of products, which covers loungewear, eveningwea­r, casualwear, beachwear and practicall­y any type of clothing customers could have need of

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines