Second of Three Parts
Scouring the Globe to Give Shoppers an $8.63 Polo Shirt
Wal-Mart, once a believer in buying American, extracts ever lower prices
from 10,000 suppliers worldwide. Workers struggle to keep pace.
By Nancy
Cleeland, Evelyn Iritani and Tyler Marshall Times Staff
Writers
November 24, 2003
SAN PEDRO SULA, HONDURAS — When Wal-Mart
Stores Inc. demands a lower price for the shirts and shorts it sells by the
millions, the consequences are felt in a remote Chinese industrial town, at a
port in Bangladesh and here in Honduras, under the corrugated metal roof of the
Cosmos clothing factory.
Isabel Reyes, who has worked at the plant for 11
years, pushes fabric through her sewing machine 10 hours a day, struggling to
meet the latest quota scrawled on a blackboard.
She now sews sleeves onto
shirts at the rate of 1,200 garments a day. That's two shirts a minute, one
sleeve every 15 seconds.
"There is always an acceleration," said Reyes,
37, who can't lift a cooking pot or hold her infant daughter without the
anti-inflammatory pills she gulps down every few hours. "The goals are always
increasing, but the pay stays the same."
Reyes, who earns the equivalent
of $35 a week, says her bosses blame the long hours and low wages on big U.S.
companies and their demands for ever-cheaper merchandise. Wal-Mart, the biggest
company of them all, is the Cosmos factory's main customer.
Reyes is
skeptical. Why, she asked, would a company in the richest country in the world
care about a few pennies on a pair of shorts?
The answer: Wal-Mart built
its empire on bargains.
The company's size and obsession with shaving
costs have made it a global economic force. Its decisions affect wages, working
conditions and manufacturing practices — even the price of a yard of denim —
around the world.
From its headquarters in Bentonville, Ark., the company
has established a network of 10,000 suppliers and constantly pressures them to
lower their prices. At the same time, Wal-Mart buyers continually search the
globe for still-cheaper sources of supply. The competition pits vendor against
vendor, country against country.
"They control so much of retail that
they can put someone into business or take someone out of business if they
choose to," said Pat Danahy, a former chief executive at Cone Mills Corp. in
Greensboro, N.C., one of the few surviving U.S. textile producers.
In
Honduras, the pressure keeps factory managers on edge, always looking for ways
to cut expenses without running afoul of labor laws or Wal-Mart's own contractor
rules, which call for "reasonable employee work hours."
"I think we have
reached the limit," said Shin Woo Kang, manager of the enormous Han Soll Textile
Ltd. sewing plant on the outskirts of San Pedro Sula. The plant employs 1,600
workers, mostly young women. Wal-Mart is its biggest customer.
The
brightly lighted factory is filled with humming machines, mounds of clothing
parts and fast-moving hands. Down one production line, pieces of navy blue
fabric take shape as Bobbie Brooks polo shirts, each bearing a Wal-Mart price
tag of $8.63.
Kang said Wal-Mart was paying Han Soll about $3 a shirt — a
few cents less than last year.
Asked what he would do if the retailer
pressed for an even lower price, Kang grew quiet. "We would have to find
something," he said finally. "Honestly speaking, I don't know what it
is."
To cut costs, Honduran factories have reduced payrolls and become
more efficient. The country produces the same amount of clothing as it did three
years ago, but with 20% fewer workers, said Henry Fransen, director of the
Honduran Apparel Manufacturers Assn., which represents nearly 200 export
factories.
"We're earning less and producing more," he said with a laugh,
"following the Wal-Mart philosophy."
That's harsh medicine for a
developing country. The clothing industry is one of the few sources of decent
jobs for unskilled workers in this nation of 6 million. Many of those jobs
depend on Wal-Mart.
"You could be looking at a government meltdown if
something were to happen to this industry," said Raja Rajan, a factory manager
active in the apparel association.
In Rajan's view, Wal-Mart is so
important to the stability of Honduras that leaders should cultivate stronger
ties with the company, almost as they would a foreign country. He has lobbied
the government to send high-level envoys to Wal-Mart's Arkansas headquarters,
something Bangladesh and other countries already do.
Even with such
efforts, Rajan fears that the migration of sewing jobs to China and other
lower-cost countries can't be stopped, only slowed.
Chuck Wilburn figures
that his 1,300 employees will be among the casualties. He manages a factory on
the outskirts of San Pedro Sula that cranks out clothing for Wal-Mart, Target
Corp. and other retailers.
Wilburn's employer, Oxford Industries of
Atlanta, once owned 44 factories in the American South. It shuttered them all in
the last 15 years and moved the work to cheaper locales. That's how Wilburn
found himself in Honduras.
He is proud of his clean, modern factory.
"It's nicer than the one I ran in South Carolina," Wilburn said.
Still,
he has had trouble turning a profit. He laid off 500 employees two years ago.
Even here, it's hard to meet Wal-Mart's prices. Wilburn expects that Oxford will
close his factory in the next few years and move on to another country where
basic cotton clothes, such as Wal-Mart's Old Glory khaki pants, can be produced
for less.
"Our business is a lot of twill stuff," he said. "That will be
gone."
*
Waving the Flag
It wasn't long ago that
Wal-Mart was fighting to keep manufacturing jobs on U.S. soil.
In 1985,
founder Sam Walton launched his "Bring It Home to the USA" program. "Wal-Mart
believes American workers can make a difference," he told his suppliers,
offering to pay as much as 5% more for U.S.-made products.
In his 1992
memoir, "Made in America," Walton claimed that the program had saved or created
nearly 100,000 jobs by using "the power of this enormous enterprise as a force
for change."
But the late Walton's much-trumpeted effort soon was
overtaken by the rise of the global economy. The spread of the Internet and
other technology, along with U.S.-led efforts to tear down trade barriers, made
it easier to move goods and capital across borders.
To maintain its edge
on pricing, Wal-Mart quietly joined other retailers in a worldwide search for
the cheapest sources of production.
In apparel, the process begins with
Celia Clancy. From a renovated warehouse near the company's headquarters, the
Wal-Mart executive vice president oversees the world's largest clothing budget,
estimated at $35 billion in 2000.
Clancy gives her buyers a "Plus One"
mandate every year: For each item they handle, they must either lower the cost
or raise the quality.
To demonstrate, she pulled a pair of girls' shorts
off the wall of her cramped office and gave them a tug.
"This was a dumb
little knit pull-on short," Clancy said. "We improved the fabric, put some more
fashion in it and are selling it for the same price as last year —
$5.19."
Keeping prices low like this means squeezing costs at every step.
Clancy and her buyers have trimmed back the number of brands, styles and color
schemes. That allows Wal-Mart to consolidate its purchases of fabric,
accessories and thread and to wrangle steep discounts from
suppliers.
Clancy's buyers used to rely on a Hong Kong company and other
intermediaries to find bargains overseas. This year, Wal-Mart established its
own global procurement division to hunt for the cheapest raw materials,
manufacturers and shipping routes. Last year, for instance, the company rerouted
cargo from a port in Hong Kong to the southern Chinese province of Guangdong,
where shipping rates were lower. The savings: $650,000.
In purchasing
fabrics such as denim and khaki, Wal-Mart plans to approach three to five mills
around the world and pit them against each other. "We'll be putting our global
muscle on them," said Ken Eaton, head of the global procurement division, which
has 21 offices in 18 countries.
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| CUTTING OUT THE MIDDLEMAN: Ken Eaton, head of Wal-Mart's new global procurement division, believes he can cut supplier costs at least 20%. (Photo: David Frank Dempsey for The Times)
|
Eaton believes he can reduce costs at
least 20% by cutting out the middleman and buying directly from foreign
factories. He feels a sense of urgency about his mission, in part because he
believes the company's "Buy American" focus left it playing catch
up.
"Honestly, we're kind of late to the party," he said. "There are a
lot of companies out there that have been direct-importing and understanding the
global aspect of sourcing for a long, long time."
As late as 1995,
Wal-Mart said imports accounted for no more than 6% of its products. Today,
consulting firm Retail Forward estimates that 50% to 60% of the merchandise in
the company's U.S. stores is imported.
Wal-Mart Chief Executive H. Lee
Scott Jr. said in an interview that the trend reflected an inescapable reality:
U.S. consumers aren't willing to pay even a little extra for a "Made in America"
label.
"The customer ultimately drives that," he
said.
Big in Bangladesh
Wal-Mart is the most
powerful corporate citizen in Bangladesh, even though it doesn't operate a
single store in the country.
When the company complained to Bangladesh's
Export Promotion Bureau this spring about delays in moving cargo, the response
was swift.
Officials in the southern port of Chittagong are speeding up
efforts to reduce paperwork and modernize facilities. Over the objections of
labor leaders, port officials also are building a five-berth container terminal
that will be privately managed. Already, giant cranes have helped shorten a
ship's turnaround time from six days to fewer than four.
It's no wonder
Wal-Mart wields such clout in this country, where nearly half the population
lives in poverty. The company bought 14% of the $1.9 billion in apparel that
Bangladesh shipped to the U.S. last year.
"Wal-Mart is our biggest
customer and it's important to me," said Commerce Minister Amir Khasru Mahmud
Chowdhury. But, he added, Wal-Mart's prices "are coming down all the time —
that's the biggest threat to us."
Bangladeshi factory owners say Wal-Mart
and other retailers have asked them to cut their prices by as much as 50% in
recent years.
One apparel manufacturer described a visit from a Wal-Mart
buyer who showed him a European-made garment that retailed for $100 to $130. The
buyer asked the Bangladeshi to produce a knockoff for $10 a dozen. He
declined.
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| BUYER AND VENDOR: Supplier Stan Adler presents new fashions to a Wal-Mart buyer. The retailer is always looking for cheaper supply sources. (photo: Brian Vander Brug/Los Angeles Times)
|
"They say to come down in price, but we have to make a profit,"
complained another clothing maker. Hoping to land a Wal-Mart order for 600,000
fleece jackets this year, he bargained down his suppliers of fabric, thread and
fastenings, and managed to cut his price by 20%.
It wasn't good enough
for Wal-Mart. "They said they will place the order in Vietnam or China," he
recalled.
Syed Naved Husain had hoped to avoid this sort of
nickel-and-diming by going upscale.
As head of the apparel division for
Beximco, Bangladesh's largest private company, Husain spent $300 million in 1995
to build a computerized textile and apparel manufacturing center in a rice paddy
outside Dhaka. He hired hot designers from Asia and Europe.
Within a few
years, he was manufacturing clothes for European retailers Diesel and Zara, and
his lushly landscaped "manufacturing oasis" had become an industry
showpiece.
But the market has started to change. Wal-Mart is selling
more-fashionable clothes, and Husain's high-end customers are nervous. They are
pushing him like never before to cut costs.
"Unfortunately," Husain said
of Wal-Mart, "they've created a model that has taken the world by
storm."
U.S. retailers began making their way to Bangladesh in the 1980s.
They found a large population of poor, young women willing to work from dawn to
dusk for a few pennies an hour.
Many factories lacked ventilation and
fire escapes. Labor activists estimated in the mid-1990s that as many as 50,000
Bangladeshi children were sewing apparel for companies such as Wal-Mart and
Kmart Corp.
The resulting outcry prompted a government crackdown on the
use of child labor and led companies such as Wal-Mart to require suppliers to
adhere to labor laws and safety standards.
Sheikh Nazma, a former child
laborer, has seen the way Wal-Mart can help clean things up.
She worked
at a Dhaka garment factory that had no clean drinking water and only a few
filthy toilets for hundreds of employees. After the owner refused to pay their
wages for three months, the employees complained to Wal-Mart, the factory's main
customer.
"Wal-Mart interfered, and … the owner paid our salaries and
overtime and even paid bonuses to each worker," recalled Nazma, who later helped
launch the Bangladesh Independent Garment Workers Union Federation.
But
Nazma and others say Wal-Mart undermines its good efforts with its incessant
push for lower prices. To fill orders on short schedules, factories often force
their employees to work overtime or stay on the job for weeks without a day off,
according to Sayeeda Roxana Khan, a former factory manager in Dhaka. To conceal
such practices, auditors say, some factories keep two sets of
books.
"It's the workers who suffer when entrepreneurs have to survive by
cutting corners," said Khan, who now works for Verite, a firm that conducts
factory audits for Tommy Hilfiger, Levi Strauss and other U.S.
companies.
Khadija Akhter can attest to that. For about $21 a month,
nearly three times what a maid or cook would make, the 22-year-old worked in a
Dhaka factory, performing final checks on men's shirts and
trousers.
Employees, she said, often worked from 8 a.m. to 3 a.m. for 10
to 15 days at a stretch to fill big orders from Wal-Mart. Exhausted, she quit
after a year and took a lower-paying but less grueling job.
All the
speeding up by Bangladeshi factories may not be enough to satisfy
Wal-Mart.
A. Hasnat, Wal-Mart's general manager in Bangladesh, said the
country's factories need to become more efficient still. From his vantage, many
are poorly managed, have outdated equipment and run too slowly.
"I think
they need to improve," he said. "When I entered a factory in China, it seemed
they are very fast."
*
3,000 Factories in China
Eyes
down, hunched forward, 20-year-old Ping Qiuxia steered a pair of green women's
briefs through a sewing machine. Then her fingers whipped the briefs 180 degrees
and moved them back toward her, this time with elastic bands stitched neatly
around the edges. Within seconds, she was at work on the next pair.
The
garment was part of a 6,000-piece order scheduled for shipment to Wal-Mart
stores in Germany. For nine hours a day, sometimes six days a week, Ping and
other employees of the Gladpeer Garment Factory in the southern Chinese city of
Dongguan churn out undergarments, sleepwear and children's clothing.
In
southern China, Wal-Mart has found all the ingredients it needs to keep its
"every day low prices" among the lowest in the world.
Although labor
costs more here than it does in Bangladesh, China offers other advantages:
low-cost raw materials; modern factories, highways and ports; and helpful
government officials.
Wal-Mart has been instrumental in making this
corner of China the world's fastest-growing manufacturing zone. Last year, the
company shipped $12 billion in products out of China, 20% more than in
2001.
The marriage between the world's largest and most efficient
retailer and China's low-cost factories is setting a new global "cost standard"
for manufactured products, according to consulting firm Deloitte Touche
Tohmatsu.
The phenomenon is rattling competitors worldwide and worrying
international labor activists. They cite the Chinese government's hostility
toward organized labor and its lack of worker protections.
"Wal-Mart has
really been at the forefront in driving down wages and working conditions," said
Kent Wong, director of the UCLA Labor Center, who has made two trips to China in
the last year. "They're not only exporting the Wal-Mart name and the corporation
and the identity. They're also exporting that way of doing
business."
Wal-Mart has more than 3,000 supplier factories in China, and
the number is expected to rise. But that doesn't mean workers in China are
secure.
Gladpeer used to make clothes in Hong Kong. It moved production
to China in the 1980s because costs were much lower, said Simon Lee, a managing
director of the family-owned firm.
Gladpeer's 1,200 workers — mostly
young women — are paid about $55 a month and live in clean but cramped
dormitories, eight to a room.
But Lee is likely to reduce his employment
in Dongguan soon. He is planning to open a new factory in Guangxi province, a
remote region of western China where labor, electricity, housing and taxes are
cheaper. "Competition is intense, and our biggest single issue is cost," Lee
said. "Many customers look at cost first, then they look at the workmanship.
That's why we're going to Guangxi."
*
Cleeland reported from Honduras, Iritani from Bangladesh and Marshall from
China. Times staff writer Abigail Goldman and Hong Kong bureau researcher Tammy
Wong contributed to this report.
(Copyright (c) 2003, Los Angeles Times) |