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New Zealand clothing brands lag behind international transparency standards

A milestone report released today by Oxfam Aotearoa reveals that some popular New Zealand clothing brands are failing to provide basic information on where their clothes are made, despite this being increasingly standard in Australia and in Europe. 

Part of the ‘What She Makes’ campaign, the report reveals supply chain transparency ratings for six of New Zealand’s top fashion brands based on public data available to consumers. While some brands performed extremely well, receiving a full five-star rating, popular brands Glassons and Hallenstein Bros received a disappointing two-star rating. 

“Well-known fashion brands have really stepped up for this milestone,” said Shalomi Daniel, Oxfam Aotearoa’s Campaign Lead for Gender and Economic Justice.  

“We’re thrilled to see New Zealand founded brands and household names Kathmandu and Macpac performing equally as well as large multinational brands H&M and Lululemon all of whom received a full five-star rating. All four brands’ transparency extends to full lists of their Tier 1 factories, where they are located, and data about the people who are working in them. 

 “It is disappointing that Glassons and Hallenstein Bros have chosen not to share the most updated transparency information with their customers. Through not meeting all our basic criteria, unfortunately they received only a two-star rating. We hope to see them improve this as soon as possible. 

“More and more, customers are expecting their favourite brands to be upfront about where their clothes are made. Transparency is the foundation of an ethical supply chain – it allows workers, unions, and groups of people like us to scrutinise the working conditions of these factories and ensure that women who make our clothes are treated and paid fairly. 

“If a brand doesn’t share this data, that doesn’t mean the working conditions in their factories are bad – but it does make it that much harder for anyone to find out. 

“In some cases, brands themselves don’t even know where their garments are being made. After the Rana Plaza disaster in 2013, some top international fashion brands only learned their workers had been killed when their logos were found in the rubble. 

“We’re calling for improved transparency across the fashion industry. It’s clear the basic standards have shifted – and they’ll only continue to. While we focused on Tier 1 suppliers in this report – the factories that directly supply the brands – some of the brands we looked at are already looking into reporting on their Tier 2 suppliers, the ones that supply their Tier 1 factories. This is commendable, and we see this sort of transparency being the future for the industry.” 

This transparency milestone is the second in the What She Makes campaign, where Oxfam Aotearoa is working alongside brands on a journey to paying the women who make their clothes in countries like Bangladesh and China a living wage.  

In late 2022, the first campaign milestone asked the brands to make a public commitment to paying workers in the supply chain a living wage. The campaign’s next milestone will be next year, when brands will be asked to separate labour costs in price setting and negotiation. 

“The good news is this is not the end – we will continue this journey with the brands to ensure that they pay the women who make our clothes a living wage. We welcome anyone wanting to support the campaign to help us demand better for the women who make our clothes by pledging their commitment at oxfam.org.nz/what-she-makes.” 

Full list of brand ratings from the What She Makes Brand Transparency Report: 

  • Hallenstein Bros – 2 stars  
  • Glassons – 2 stars 
  • Kathmandu – 5 stars 
  • Macpac – 5 stars 
  • H&M – 5 stars
  • Lululemon – 5 stars 

 
Notes: 

The What She Makes campaign calls on clothing brands sold in Aotearoa New Zealand to pay a living wage to the women who make our clothes. Through the What She Makes campaign, Oxfam Aotearoa works directly with the brands to help them achieve each milestone. The ratings help keep brands on track as they go. 

About the brand tracker – The brand tracker uses a star-rating system which provides a snapshot of how well each brand is doing in each milestone. The tracker includes five milestones which companies will be evaluated against:  

1. Make a commitment (released November 2022)  

As a first step, we want brands to make a credible, public commitment to pay a living wage to garment workers in their supply chain. This is a powerful demonstration that the brand is embarking upon their living wage journey.  

2. Be transparent (May 2023)  

Brands should be transparent and disclose their full supply chain and publish the following information on their website: factory names and addresses, parent companies, number of workers and breakdown by gender, sourcing channel, and date when the list is published or updated along with a statement that it is a complete list of the brand’s tier-one suppliers 

3. Separate labour costs (May 2024)  

Separation of labour costs during price negotiations helps to quickly identify if the wages being paid to garment workers correspond to a living wage or not. It also allows the clothing brands and factories to negotiate a price without affecting the wages.  

4. Publish a plan (November 2024)  

Brands should develop and publish a step-by-step strategy outlining how and when a brand will achieve its commitment to pay workers a living wage and meet all requirements with clear milestones and targets.  

5. Pay a living wage (TBC) 

Within 4-6 years of making a commitment, brands should be paying a living wage within their supply chains. This requires collaboration, consultation, and public reports on their progress throughout the process. 

What She Makes – Transparency

Shima, Transparency- big brands should have nothing to hide

Let’s ask big brands to reveal who makes their clothes

If a brand claims to be “ethical” or “sustainable” but does not know or share who makes their clothes, then something is wrong.

Transparency is the foundation of an ethical supply chain. It allows workers, unions, and groups of people like us to scrutinize the working conditions of these factories, and ensure that garment workers are treated and paid fairly. Without an up-to-date, public list of suppliers, there is no way to know where a brand makes its clothes, or whether these factories are violating human rights.

A woman holds a shirt

If clothing companies know where their factories are and where their materials come from, they can make sure living wages are paid throughout their supply chain. Without this direct knowledge, they won’t know where changes need to be made. And knowing which other brands source from the same factories enables companies to collaborate and take collective actions to improve conditions, wages and rights for workers.

We need your support in demanding accountability from the clothing brands to publish the full list of at least their tier-one factories (final stage of production), complete with all the key details such as factory names and addresses, number of workers, parent company, gender breakdown, date of last review, and regular bi-annual updates.

Let’s stand in solidarity with the women who make our clothes. Write to the brands today and demand that they improve their supplier transparency now.

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All images by Fabeha Monir, except where stated otherwise. 

Cox’s Bazar camp fire: Oxfam responding with food and shelter

A fire that swept through Rohingya refugee camps of Cox’s Bazar, Bangladesh, on Sunday has left 12,000 people homeless and in urgent need of shelter, water, sanitation, and medical services. Oxfam is mounting a response to provide immediate food and shelter to impacted people.  

“In a matter of hours, thousands of bamboo and tarpaulin shelters were destroyed along with few primary health centres, local schools, and community spaces. Thousands of families were forced to spend the night under the open sky, many without any food or water,” said Ashish Damle, Oxfam Country Director in Bangladesh.

The fire started on Sunday afternoon around 2:45 pm local time (9:45 PM NZST) in camp 11 and quickly spread to adjacent camps. While no casualties were reported, the full extent of the damage is being assessed.

“This is the second major fire that hit Rohingya camps since 2021. It took years of relief efforts to bring a semblance of normalcy to the lives of people after the first fire. To the Rohingya refugees this is a déjà vu of loss and suffering,” added Damle.  

Oxfam team is working closely with partners on the ground, assessing people’s needs; and preparing to provide most affected people with immediate food, shelter, water, and sanitation.  

Oxfam International is collaborating with community leaders, local authorities, and other partners on the ground to conduct long-term needs assessments for those affected.  

What She Makes – Sign the pledge

What She Makes - Sign the pledge

JOIN THE MOVEMENT

I pledge to stand with the women who make our clothes. I want these women to get a living wage so they can afford the basic needs of life

Systemic exploitation and widespread poverty wages are denying these women basic human rights and decent lives.

Join us to hold brands accountable. Together, let’s tell them to stop profiting by keeping millions of women in poverty and demand real action. It’s time to end this injustice and make brands pay a living wage so their workers can not only survive, but thrive.

Add your name now. Speak out and demand that clothing brands selling in New Zealand pay a living wage. #WhatSheMakes

A group of women garment workers

What She Makes Pledge – Give a gift

Tania sits on her bed

Thank you for signing the pledge!

 

Thank you for adding your name and letting the brands know that you care about #WhatSheMakes.

We appreciate any amount you can donate so we can continue fighting for the women who make our clothes. With your help, we can hold more brands accountable and stop the systemic exploitation of millions of women they profit from.

Spread the word! Share a link to the What She Makes website (www.oxfam.org.nz/what-she-makes) to encourage your friends and whānau to sign the pledge and join the #WhatSheMakes movement!

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Sign the What She Makes pledge

What She Makes - Sign the pledge

MAKE YOUR VOICE HEARD

I pledge to stand with the women who make our clothes. I want these women to get a living wage so they can afford the basic needs of life

Systemic exploitation and widespread poverty wages are denying these women basic human rights and decent lives.

Join us to hold brands accountable. Together, let’s tell them to stop profiting by keeping millions of women in poverty and demand real action. It’s time to end this injustice and make brands pay a living wage so their workers can not only survive, but thrive.

Add your name now. Speak out and demand that clothing brands selling in New Zealand pay a living wage. #WhatSheMakes

A group of women garment workers

Share with someone who will stand with us:

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

All images by Fabeha Monir, except where stated otherwise.