Seams Start to UnravelBy Nancy Cleeland Times Staff
Writer
November 24, 2003
Sewing contractor Rob Reed shut down his
Commerce factory this summer after 17 years, laying off 100 workers and adding
his name to a long list of bankrupt U.S. manufacturers.
He isn't shy
about assigning blame for what happened.
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| SHUT DOWN: Rob Reed closed his factory after demands for lower prices squeezed his profit. (photo: Carlos Chavez/Los Angeles Times)
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"We've been forced out of
business, No. 1, because of the likes of Wal-Mart," Reed said.
Wal-Mart
was once a solid account for his company, Stitches. But every season, Reed said,
the retailer demanded a lower price, shrinking his profit to the point that an
unexpected expense could push him into the red.
In January, he lost money
on a Wal-Mart order. A few months later, he was asked to make 10,000 intricately
worked cardigans for the retailer within a week. The sample already bore a
Wal-Mart price tag: $8.47. "You can't make it here at that price," Reed said at
the time. "Not legally, anyway."
Although desperate for work, he turned
the order down.
Reed, 61, now works as a consultant and dreams of opening
another contract shop that can focus more on quality and still
succeed.
He isn't terribly hopeful, however. "The thing is," Reed said,
"with so many contractors on the verge of extinction, there's always someone
willing to do it cheaper."
(Copyright (c) 2003, Los Angeles Times) |