The Phnom Penh Post

Minister seeks fair prices for apparel

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BANGLADESH demanded fair prices for garment items from US retailers and brands as local apparel exporters spent billions of dollars to strengthen workplace safety, increasing the cost of production.

Minister of Commerce Tipu Munshi made the call during a meeting with US Ambassador in Bangladesh Earl R Miller at the minister’s secretaria­t office in Dhaka on Tuesday.

“The cost of production has increased by 25 per cent to 30 per cent over the last five years due to remediatio­n of the garment factories as per the recommenda­tions of the Accord and Alliance, two foreign agencies for building inspection.”

Munshi shared the informatio­n in a press conference following the meeting with Miller.

The minister sought cooperatio­n from the US envoy to convey the message of the price hike plea to US retailers and brands, as any particular government cannot fix the prices of garment items.

Theministe­rsaid,forinstanc­e, a T-shirt which was previously supposed to be produced at a cost of $1 now costs as high as $1.25 or $1.30 a piece.

“So, we can demand around 25 per cent to 30 per cent rise in t he price of garment items now.”

“We will hold a meeting with the CEOs of almost all major retailers and brands like Walmart, Inditex, Target and Primark soon to urge them to increase the prices of garment items as we spent a lot of money to fix the loopholes in the factories,” the minister said.

Demand higher compliance

Munshi also said the buyers always demand higher compliance at the factory level, but they do not want to increase the prices of the products.

The ambassador told the minister that he could be a good salesman for Bangladesh in his country during his time as an envoy of the US.

Currently, the amount of the investment of the US investors in Bangladesh is more than $2 billion and more US investors are interested to invest in infrastruc­ture, power, airlines and LNG, he said.

Regarding the reinstatem­ent of the Generalise­d Scheme of Preference­s (GSP) for Bangladesh to the US, the minister informed the envoy about the progresses that the South Asian country has made for workplace safety in the garment sector.

However, neither the minister nor the ambassador shared details about the GSP as Bangladesh’s trade privilege was suspended by the US government in June 2013 citing poor labour rights and weak safety standards in the garment factories.

Munshi said 90 per cent of the factories have already completed the remediatio­n work.

Bangladesh can play the key role in the US’s Indo-Pacific strategy and reap a significan­t benefit from it, said Miller. “The US values the partnershi­p of Bangladesh.”

The US is the largest export destinatio­n for Bangladesh as the bilateral trade remains unbalanced toward Bangladesh.

“So we need to work together for reducing the trade imbalance,” he said.

The diplomat said he had already asked many US CEOs to come to Bangladesh as they mainly come to the Indian capital Delhi for investment.

“It is my duty to bring them to Dhaka where there is a ready market of 160 million for the US investors,” the envoy said. “Workers’ safety, factory safety and labour rights have a lot of interest in Washington.”

Bangladesh can be an example to the world, not just to the developing countries, but to the world on how workers have access to the labour rights and working in safe condition, he said.

Accord and Alliance have done an extraordin­ary job over the last couple of years, he said, adding that the amendment to the labour law is very encouragin­g.

 ?? MUNIR UZ ZAMAN/AFP ?? Garment workers sew T-shirts at a factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh in 2009.
MUNIR UZ ZAMAN/AFP Garment workers sew T-shirts at a factory in Dhaka, Bangladesh in 2009.
 ?? CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP ?? Indian sellers interact with customers in their shop in the old quarters of New Delhi on January 31.
CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP Indian sellers interact with customers in their shop in the old quarters of New Delhi on January 31.

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