Against Kristof's Anti-Anti-Sweatshop-ism
I was surprised to see Ezra Klein endorse Nicholas Kristof's column arguing that "the central challenge in the poorest countries is not that sweatshops exploit too many people, but that they don't exploit enough." Back in my college Macroeconomics class, this argument was expressed as "They're not poor because they work in sweatshops. They work in sweatshops because they're poor."
Well actually, they're poor because they don't make enough money to support themselves. If the people who hire them paid them enough, they would not be poor. Providing jobs to people who would rather work them than stay unemployed doesn't release whoever provides the job from responsibility for how they treat them, just as saving someone from drowning would not give me any more right to mug that person than I have to mug anyone else.
The Post reported in 2005 that National Labor Committee Head Charles Kernaghan
gets angry when he recalls what a worker told him in Bangladesh: "If we could earn 37 cents an hour, we could live with a little dignity." (As opposed to the 21-cent hourly wage that barely staved off starvation.)
As CAPAF's Sabina Dawan observes, it's not as though the International Labor Organization and allied groups working to close such gaps and to see basic human rights protected in plants that make Western companies so rich are out to drive the people of Cambodia out of their jobs - or as though that's the inevitable result of letting workers go to the bathroom, or leave work to give birth. Does Kristof believe that the Bangladeshi worker Kernaghan references makes 21 cents an hour because at 22 cents his plant would stop making a profit?
As Richard Rothstein wrote in his rejoinder to Kristof:
Kristof's logic would require that worker productivity in Indonesia be precisely 25 percent of that in Mexico, or that the cost of other factors be lower in Mexico than in Indonesia, offsetting higher labor costs. Otherwise, he could not claim that if Indonesian wages rose even a tiny bit closer to Mexican levels, seamstresses would be expelled to the garbage dump. But he has no basis for making such assumptions. While labor standards vary from country to country, technology for assembling apparel does not-that is dictated from New York, for all countries. Apparel manufacturers consider many issues in deciding where to site facilities; labor costs are one, but relatively small differences in labor costs are not.
...Even if a modest increase in Indonesia's minimum wage tempted manufacturers to move their facilities to, say, Mexico, the temptation would be frustrated if Mexico simultaneously enforced a comparable increase in its minimum. The fear that labor standards would cause manufacturers to flee only makes sense if some countries were exempt from global regulation. Kristof never explores why he thinks this is likely.
What's so often missing from arguments like Kristof's, backed by neoclassical economics, heartbreaking anecdotes, and the appeal of counterintuitive conclusions, is an engagement with questions of power. As Rothstein argues, the anti-anti-sweatshop crowd often point to the history of sweatshops in the American garment industry, but they choose to overlook that American garment workers rose out of poverty not just through hard work but through collective action and collective bargaining to achieve the "labor standards" Kristof consigns to scare quotes. But when sweatshop workers in third world countries join international labor and human rights organizations in demanding a better life, they don't get laudatory Kristof columns.
Instead, they get threats to their lives. As Human Rights Watch observed last month, "there has been an ongoing pattern of violence against trade union activists in Cambodia."
Economic coercion isn't the only kind making maintaining the sweatshop status quo. Larry Summers, in classic neoclassical style, may defend sweatshop labor in the name of "respecting the choices" of the people who work there, but doing so without a peep for those workers' right to organize without threat of murder is a cruel joke.
When Barack Obama mentioned the spate of assassinations targeting union leaders in Colombia, John McCain rolled his eyes. If Nicholas Kristof takes such violent intimidation more seriously, maybe he should devote a column to it. He could use a new bit - that Rothstein article critiquing Kristof's sweatshop apologia was published in 2005.


Absolutely, Josh. The blindness to power is breathtaking, on its own. Kristof mentions in passing that Cambodia's experiments with raising wages & conditions are being undercut by "bribes." And then skips merrily on, ignoring this abuse of power - along with dozens just like it in the sweatshops - and makes it into a pseudo-economic argument that raising wages would run these companies - and workers - out of business.
So.... moving up from being a picker to being in a sweatshop is a golden improvement in people's lives, and to be supported, and not at all uneconomic... while any improvement in sweatshop conditions is a backbreaker, a life-destroyer.
I've got some time for Kristof, actually, on some columns, but this was just bollocks. I've spent a lot of time on the waste trade, from pickers on up, and what Nick SHOULD know is that the same abuses of power, and the same "economic" arguments are made by the bosses THERE, only against sweatshops. The waste industry is so filthy - in both the developing world, and our own - and so riddled by corruption, and mob power, and so abusive of the front-line workers, that it's staggering. And yet, somehow Nick just speaks of the fact that people want OUT of there, as if that makes perfect personal and economic sense, and then... swings his arm and dismisses the same arguments, and the same demands, at the next rung up the ladder, in the sweatshops.
Thanks for the great links, JE. Rec'd, highly.
January 18, 2009 3:53 PM | Reply | Permalink
Highly recommended also. Very well constructed with very fine links.
I picture Delay on that island smiling and saying that the experience showed the world how capitalism works.
You know we have the Hague and the concept of war criminals. We need an international consensus of what slavery is and a way in which the world can try and punish these people.
January 18, 2009 4:31 PM | Reply | Permalink
I have always found Kristof the sort of detestable "bleeding-heart" liberal who tells American workers who are just barely making do that decreasing their wages and living standards is the moral thing to do since it will elevate still poorer workers and peasants in Asia. Kristof can take a vow of poverty and give his salary to the poor and let his family wallow in the garbage dumps of America; perhaps that would be admirable; I do not think so; but it is really detestable that he is willing to tell others that is what they should do.
January 18, 2009 7:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
There is always some cheaper toxic dump of workplace on Earth for corporations to move to and unless the US maintains some standards the US is going to be flooded by goods made by basically slave labor in hellish conditions where there are no labor and health standards. It a huge hungry world labor market and it up to the US to maintain labor standards and working condtions vis-a-vis what goods are imported here. No one else will.
January 18, 2009 8:33 PM | Reply | Permalink
I blogged about this before. Sharon Astyk asserts that these sweatshop workers are the base of the pyramid of our first world wealth:
http://tpmcafe.talkingpointsmemo.com/talk/2008/09/finances-workers-food-oil.php
January 18, 2009 11:05 PM | Reply | Permalink
My message to Kristof on his facebook page:
Dear Mr. Kristof,
I am writing relating your article in the the Times on Jan 14 entitled "Where sweatshops are a dream". I am shocked by your economic reasoning malfunction. Maybe you should write an article about the history of slavery in America, how low-cost labor was dragged in chains accross the Atlantic so wealthy landlords can get low-cost production and huge ROI. History might teach you a lesson. You would probably argue that the slave trade was a route out of poverty for the slaves. Probably slavery was even a dream job and people couldn't wait to be abducted, using your line of reasoning. I am open for a debate on this issue.
Regards,
Igor
January 30, 2009 12:50 AM | Reply | Permalink