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On Sweatshops
Cafe Hayek has quoted an editorial on sweatshop wages.
We examined the apparel industry in 10 Asian and Latin American countries often accused of having sweatshops and then we looked at 43 specific accusations of unfair wages in 11 countries in the same regions. Our findings may seem surprising. Not only were sweatshops superior to the dire alternatives economists usually mentioned [such as working on subsistence farms], but they often provided a better-than-average standard of living for their workers.
The apparel industry, which is often accused of unsafe working conditions and poor wages, actually pays its foreign workers well enough for them to rise above the poverty in their countries. While more than half of the population in most of the countries we studied lived on less than $2 per day, in 90 percent of the countries, working a 10-hour day in the apparel industry would lift a worker above - often far above - that standard. For example, in Honduras, the site of the infamous Kathy Lee Gifford sweatshop scandal, the average apparel worker earns $13.10 per day, yet 44 percent of the country's population lives on less than $2 per day.
Boudreaux appends the timeless lesson:
In and of itself, situation A is neither good nor bad; it is good or bad only in comparison with it's real alternatives. This lesson is a hard one, perhaps -- it's certainly an unromantic one -- but it's indispensable for sound analysis.
His post on slaughterhouses, as described by Upton Sinclair's famous work, touches on the same theme and is also worth a read.
You are surely numbered
You are surely numbered among the elect, Josh!
This "better than the available options" cliche, common to a lot of pro-sweatshop boilerplate, ignores the issue of collusion between governments and sweatshop employers in DETERMINING what other options are available. When the bargaining power of labor in some TW country reflects the fact that the U.S. put a Suharto or Pinochet in power--mainly with a view to the interest of American corporations operating in that country--the "best available option" argument is pretty friggin' disingenuous. But people like Boudreaux keep repeating it over and over, no matter how many times they're called on it.
While sweatshops are
While sweatshops are significantly better than the alternatives, they are also significantly worse than the alternatives if the sweatshops' nations were free.
Don't think that there's no connection between unfree governments and sweatshops. International corporations are more than happy to work with corrupt governments to quash union activity and drive out local industry.
- Josh
Kevin, Shouldn't we then
Kevin,
Shouldn't we then focus on making better options available through increased trade and government reform rather than trying to remove the sweatshops, thereby making workers even worse off?