TED Case Studies
Number xxx, 20xx
by xxxx
KATHY LEE GIFFORD

& SWEAT SHOPS ALLEGATIONS

General Information
Legal Cluster
Bio-Geographic Cluster
Trade Cluster
Environment Cluster
Other Clusters

Mandala Home
Trade Environment Database
Inventory of Conflict and Environment
Global Classroom
Etown
Environment, Statistics and Policy
Site Map

TED Home Page About TED Research Projects Sort
Cases
TED
Cases Issue Papers Site Index

KATHY LEE GIFFORD


 

 

I.Identification

1. The Issue

Kathy Lee Gifford, a famous actress, a singer and a television talk show host, came under srutiny in 1995 because her line of women’s clothing was allegedly being made by child labor. Kathy lee obviously refuted the allegations. This is not an isolated case however. Nike, Gap, Guess, Bodyshop and many more manufacturing companies came under scrutiny in recent years due to their labor laws violations in overseas. As more information about the exploitation of indigenous peoples comes forth in the international debates concerning labor law violations, more awareness is being raised, to stop the exploitation of labor; particularly regarding child labor. The issue in this case study deals with labor rights violations. Trans National Companies (TNCs) in attempts to make substantial profit, move their manufacturing plants oversees where there is surplus labor availability. In an effort to make higher profits and with fewer restrictions on labor laws, TNCs force their workers in their plants to work extensively without any breaks or without good working conditions. Commodities are therefore made at a cheap labor cost, and sold back to the Western world (predominantly) at “brand name” price. This case study deals with one such issue of labor law violations. Kathy Lee's women's line of clothing are subcontracted to a manufacturing plant in Hondurs, where the plant hires children to work in filthy and disease infeseted environment. Furthermore, the children are not even paid a decent wage for their work. see sweat shop conditions .

2. Description

Kathy Lee Gifford is well known for her achievements and accomplishments as a singer, an actress, and as a television talk co-host. Kathy Lee was on the verge of becoming a well known celebrity because of her co-hosting career in the ABC talk show, "Regis and Kathy Lee Live", when her reputation and status was brought under the negative limelight.

In March 1995, Kathy Lee and her line of women's clothing came under attack when investigators from the National Labor Committee found teenage women sewing clothing at her Global Fashion plant in Honduras. The clothes were then exported to the U.S. for sale at Wal-Mart. When Kathie Lee's clothing was being produced, approximately 10 percent of the workers employed at Global Fashion were thirteen to fifteen years old. March, 1996

Sweatshop conditions:

The young women working in the plant for Kathy Lee were found to be of thirteen to fifteen years of age 1 . The workers were not allowed to take breaks, or have a drink of water if they were thirsty. They were forced to work overtime and pull twelve-hour shifts if the plant had to meet with deadlines. Like many offshore assembly plants, Global Fashion was a humiliating place to work. About 80 percent of the sewers in Kathy Lee’s plant were women, the majority of them very young. The women had to raise their hands to use the bathrooms, which were kept locked. Bathroom visits were limited to two per day. The women were not allowed to talk to each other during work. They were physically searched on the way into the plant for candy or food, which was prohibited. The supervisors scream at them all day to work faster and faster. As a result, those workers who were interested in attending night school would not do so. Workers worked in hideous conditions where they were not allowed to take breaks, not even to relieve themselves. Furthermore, the machines they were using were rust laden and prone to accidents. Furthermore, the machines they were using were rust laden and prone to accidents. Additionally, those women were being paid only thirty-one cents, and they were obstructed from learning about their rights as laborers so that they could not voice their opinions about their rights. Global Fashion has hired at least four armed guards, who are used to intimidate the young women. Every attempt by the women to meet to learn their legal rights is disrupted. Every attempt to organize themselves to defend their most basic human rights has been met with threats and illegal firings. 2 .

What is a "sweatshop"? What conditions are necessary for a manufacturing plant to be labeled a sweatshop and also let us explore into the insurgence of controversy that has been created in the recent past due to the conditions and the exploitative nature of sweatshops.

Sweatshops, according to the New York State Department of Labor (DOL), are an illegal operation of the underground economy as they operate as temporary plants that can be moved at moment's notice- and can be moved quickly from one place to another. According to the DOL, "sweatshops flourish because of the huge competitive advantage they hold over legitimate businesses that pay fair wages, provide safe working conditions, pay taxes and contribute to the economic and social health of New York and the nation" 3 . Implicit in this argument, sweatshops do not give fair wages to the employees, do not provide safe working conditions for the employees; evade taxes to the state or the government, and do not contribute to the social and economic health or attributes of the nation.

The idea of competition does not merely exist for the TNCs, but also for the "host", developing or under-developed, countries. Just as companies, in order to be successful with a particular commodity attempt to out drive the competitors of that commodity, likewise, host countries outbid the other to attract foreign investments into their respective countries. According to an editorial published in Los Angeles Times on July 24, 1995 by Bob Herbert mentions an advertisement run in 1990 in Bobbin, a trade magazine targeting the United States' apparel industry. The advertisement portrays an El Salvadorian young woman next to a sewing machine in a shirt factory with the text reading, "you can hire her for 57 cents an hour". However, a year later, in 1991, that particular advertisement was changed to "you can hire her for 33 cents an hour". This is how developing countries, in order to attract foreign investments, lower the cost of their labor; as a result contribute to the race to the bottom.

However, when the allegations surfaced through the media in the United States, ABC- the network which broadcasted and owned the copyright to Regis & Kathy lee Live, attempted to undo the damage by portraying a distort Kathy Lee, “I felt like I was being of all people, being kicked in the teeth for trying to help kids.” ABC then embarked on a number of public relations programs, which attempted to show the innocence of Kathy Lee by touting her good works for charities. However, when it was discovered that few blocks away from her studio, a New York sweatshop was turning out Kathy Lee blouses for Walmart, where the workers were hired to work for more than 60 hours a week, and most of them were not even gotten paid for previous work, the entrepreneur's husband, ABC sportscaster Frank Gifford, responded by rushing to the sweatshop with envelopes of $300 in cash for the mistreated workers. See Albion Monitor

3. Related Cases
Thaiwomen
Saipan
Bodyshop
Nike
Ben & Jerry's
Russian Women Trafficking

Bracero

Africa-Textiles
Rugmark and Child labor
Nepal Sex Trade
SandleWood
Picker

4. Author and Date:

Sajeed Asghar (Titu)
Spring 2001

II. Legal Clusters

5. Discourse and Status:

Disagreement and in Progress.

In the 1970s, after considerable awareness was created about the slave like conditions that existed in the sweatshops, international organizations such as the United Nations drafted a "Code of Conduct" which became the "standard" to be followed by the TNCs and various host countries.

Consequently, in 1997, the International Labor Organization adopted a Tripartite Declaration of Principles on Multinational Enterprises and Social Policy, which had been given considerable importance by the workers' group in 1996 in Geneva 4 .

Additionally, in May 1995, the "Clothing Manufacturers' Association of the United States of America (employers) and the Amalgamated Clothing Textiles Workers' Union (workers) signed for the first time a national branch collective agreement which included, amongst other aspects, a code of conduct applicable to enterprises and their subcontractors which established minimum standards regarding wages, hours of work, forced labour, child labour, freedom of association, non-discrimination as well as occupational safety and health" (An article by Jean-Paul Sajhau)

In the United States, the Department of Labor (DOL) believes that it should be illegal to sell good produced in violation of labor laws 5 .

The "No Sweat" campaign includes a list of companies (mentioned below) that have taken the fight against sweatshops, have taken steps to respect labor legislation and human rightsin general in their production and marketing activities and ensures that these rights are respected by their subcontractors.

The list of companies
Abercrombie& Fitch Galyans Trading Mast Industries
Baby Superstore GapKids NFL Properties
Banana Republic Gerber Childrenswear Nicole Miller
Bath & Body Works Guess Inc. Nordstrom
Bergners Henri Bendel Old Navy Clothing Store
Bryland Lands End Penhaligon's
Boston Stores Jessica McClintock Patagonia
Cacique Lane Bryant Structure
Carson Pirie Scott Lerner New York Superior Surgical Mfg.
Dana Buchman Levi Strauss The Limited
Elisabeth Limited Too The Gap
Express Liz Claiborne Victoria's Secret
Source: Department of Labor, 25 Mar. 1996.

A detailed summary on the aggrement can also be found on Summary of the agreement .

6. Forum and Scope:

The United States of America and Bilateral.

7.Decision Breadth:

Two (2) The U.S. and Latin America


8. Legal Standing:

TREATY

In the Textile, Clothing and Footware manufacturing sectors, the International Textile, Garment and Leather Workers' Federation has for many years been calling for a greater sense of social responsibility by enterprises in the sectors and has provided support to national federations in their campaign for the respect of human rights at work. In 1995, Clothing Textiles workers' Union signed for the first time a national branch collective agreement which included, amongst other aspects, a code of conduct applicable to enterprises and their subcontractors which established minimum standards regarding wages, hours of work, forced labour, child labour, freedom of association, non-discrimination as well as occupational safety and health. According to the covenant of the United Nations' General Assembly, laws pertaining to the violations of labor rights across boarders are being discussed, yet no proper authority is in place to implement the law in an international arena. The United Nations and the International Labor Organization has off and on criticized the violators (the US and the Western Europe), but no task force has been stablished to prevent the exploitation of the workers by the TNCs.

III. Geographic Clusters

9. Geographic Locations

a. Geographic Domain:

North America

b. Geographic Site:

Central America

c. Geographic Impact:

Honduras.

10. Sub-National Factors:

No.

11. Type of Habitat:

Tropical


IV. Trade Clusters

12. Type of Measure:

Ban on imports

13. Direct v. Indirect Impacts:

Indirect

14. Relation of Trade Measure to Environmental Impact

a. Directly Related to Product:

Clothing (Yes)

b. Indirectly Related to Product:

No

c. Not Related to Product:

No

d. Related to Process:

Rights (Yes)

15. Trade Product Identification:

Textiles/ apparel

16. Economic Data

An article published in www.worldfreeinternet.net on June 4, 1996, claims that Kathy Lee paid 31 cents for child labor 6 . Sweatshop is a product of our global economy, with consumers and producers demanding cheaper and better products; and cheaper and ample labor, respectively.

When allegations of misconduct by a well know figure in the United States surfaces, as the allegations of sweatshop abuses by Kathy Lee, the media truncates their misconduct by portraying them to be innocent and a Good Samaritan. Coming under scrutiny from labor-rights activists, Kathie Lee Gifford announced an inspection program for all factories producing her line of clothes. Although Kathy Lee acknowledges her contribution to the miseries of the people employed at the factories that produce her line of women’s clothing (in New York and Honduras) she has not done much to alleviate their sufferings. Requesting Walmart to return the cloths make off of sweatshop factories, and rushing to give the tortured women in New York factories $300, does not make her the forerunner in the fight against sweatshops.

The following table of productivity index and hourly compensation in particular countries better illustrates sweatshops as a global economic product.

Apparel Manufacturing in 1998, in U.S. dollars

Country Productivity
(Index)
Hourly Compensation
(includes wages & benefits)
U.S. 100 $8.00
Dominican Republic 70 1.15
Malaysia 65 1.15
Mexico 70 0.85
Guatemala 70 0.65
Thailand 65 0.65
Indonesia 50 0.15
DATA: Kurt Salmon Associates.
Source: www.sweatshopwatch.org/swatch/industry/

17. Impact of Trade Restriction: 

No impact on trade restictions as of yet. The problems of sweatshops exists in Honduras as well as metropolitan cities like New York and Los Angeles.

18. Industry Sector:  

Garment Manufacturing & Textile Industry

19. Exporters and Importers:

Importers: Honduras imports raw materials and exports finished products;

Exporters: Walmart exports rawmaterials and imports finished garment products (women's line of clothings in particular).

V. Environment Clusters

20. Environmental Problem Type:

Labor law violations (Rights)

21. Resource Impact and Effect:

Low and Structure

22. Urgency and Lifetime:

Moderate and 10 Years

23. Substitutes:

None

VI. Other Factors

24. Culture:
No

25. Trans-Boundary Issues:

Yes. Manufacturing jobs are being shipped overseas to developing or under-developed countries, where labor is cheap and abundant. As a result, the U.S. labor is loosing capital. However, due to less restrictions on labor laws in the third world countries, thier labor is being exploited by Kathy Lee's women's line of clothing

26. Rights:

Yes Human Rights, Labor laws violations.

27. Relevant Literature

International Labor Organization

www.webcom.com

Bob Herbert

www.worldfreeinternet.net

www.uniteunion.org

Kathie Lee Fashions Made By Child Labor

Sweat Shops in the Modern World by Aaron Kuller

The Students of Mr. Fernandes' Grade 6/7 Class

Department of Labor



1/2001