Berliner Boersenzeitung - Civil war economy hits Myanmar garment workers

EUR -
AED 4.310221
AFN 82.155324
ALL 97.823133
AMD 450.645235
ANG 2.100475
AOA 1076.234339
ARS 1473.514285
AUD 1.791261
AWG 2.115499
AZN 1.996077
BAM 1.961628
BBD 2.369741
BDT 142.890269
BGN 1.953652
BHD 0.442395
BIF 3447.001039
BMD 1.173647
BND 1.50457
BOB 8.110095
BRL 6.531578
BSD 1.173687
BTN 101.352119
BWP 16.360608
BYN 3.841012
BYR 23003.479863
BZD 2.357604
CAD 1.596576
CDF 3387.145366
CHF 0.93167
CLF 0.029077
CLP 1115.821696
CNY 8.42068
CNH 8.417255
COP 4779.747549
CRC 591.958723
CUC 1.173647
CUP 31.101644
CVE 110.616143
CZK 24.621957
DJF 208.580483
DKK 7.465416
DOP 70.879738
DZD 152.280921
EGP 57.593323
ERN 17.604704
ETB 160.438806
FJD 2.635075
FKP 0.869596
GBP 0.868129
GEL 3.18031
GGP 0.869596
GHS 12.235242
GIP 0.869596
GMD 84.502242
GNF 10159.087821
GTQ 9.007762
GYD 245.549533
HKD 9.212911
HNL 30.925529
HRK 7.533054
HTG 154.01759
HUF 399.0159
IDR 19081.386546
ILS 3.919001
IMP 0.869596
INR 101.336491
IQD 1537.477481
IRR 49425.218326
ISK 142.387226
JEP 0.869596
JMD 188.209174
JOD 0.832173
JPY 172.152847
KES 151.984555
KGS 102.635049
KHR 4715.713436
KMF 495.279152
KPW 1056.318627
KRW 1621.475665
KWD 0.358138
KYD 0.978106
KZT 626.230545
LAK 25309.696554
LBP 105100.083013
LKR 354.034303
LRD 235.902622
LSL 20.679287
LTL 3.465474
LVL 0.709928
LYD 6.367002
MAD 10.596809
MDL 19.905139
MGA 5199.255783
MKD 61.489111
MMK 2463.429779
MNT 4212.545586
MOP 9.490095
MRU 46.734228
MUR 53.389385
MVR 18.070545
MWK 2038.036225
MXN 21.885465
MYR 4.962764
MZN 75.066503
NAD 20.679181
NGN 1796.607129
NIO 43.131273
NOK 11.821875
NPR 162.163792
NZD 1.957138
OMR 0.451263
PAB 1.173687
PEN 4.178539
PGK 4.869168
PHP 66.751132
PKR 334.401423
PLN 4.25183
PYG 8925.250959
QAR 4.27278
RON 5.067772
RSD 117.118129
RUB 92.132882
RWF 1688.291111
SAR 4.4027
SBD 9.723776
SCR 16.576525
SDG 704.776571
SEK 11.168471
SGD 1.500596
SHP 0.922302
SLE 26.993899
SLL 24610.793968
SOS 670.744383
SRD 42.9948
STD 24292.121904
STN 24.881315
SVC 10.269204
SYP 15259.59054
SZL 20.679677
THB 37.756437
TJS 11.267275
TMT 4.119501
TND 3.37717
TOP 2.748801
TRY 47.479094
TTD 7.970681
TWD 34.502525
TZS 3063.218208
UAH 49.028302
UGX 4211.5125
USD 1.173647
UYU 47.390799
UZS 14934.657142
VES 140.209264
VND 30684.999032
VUV 139.392575
WST 3.09389
XAF 657.911671
XAG 0.029898
XAU 0.000342
XCD 3.17184
XCG 2.115285
XDR 0.819039
XOF 659.589833
XPF 119.331742
YER 282.790417
ZAR 20.611981
ZMK 10564.229246
ZMW 27.141638
ZWL 377.913833
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Advertisement Image
Civil war economy hits Myanmar garment workers
Civil war economy hits Myanmar garment workers / Photo: Ye Aung THU - AFP/File

Civil war economy hits Myanmar garment workers

As civil war pounds Myanmar's economy and drives up prices, garment worker Wai Wai often starts her shift making clothes for international brands on an empty stomach.

Advertisement Image

Text size:

The orders she and thousands of others churn out for big names including Adidas, H&M and others bring in billions of dollars in export earnings for Myanmar.

It is a rare bright spot in an economy crippled by the military's 2021 coup and subsequent slide into civil war.

But for 12 hours of sewing clothes for export to China and Europe in a bleak industrial suburb of Yangon, Wai Wai earns just over $3 a day, which has to cover rent, food and clothes.

It must also stretch to supporting her parents in Rakhine state at the other end of the country, where conflict between the military and ethnic rebels has wrecked the economy and driven food prices up.

With times so hard, Wai Wai "decided to mostly skip breakfast" to save extra money, she told AFP, asking to use a pseudonym.

"Sometimes we just have leftover rice from the night before and save money, because if we use money for breakfast, there will be less money to transfer to our family."

In a nearby factory, Thin Thin Khine and her two sisters work 12 hours a day sewing uniforms for a Myanmar company and earn a monthly salary of around 350,000 Myanmar kyat.

That's about $165 according to the official exchange rate set by the junta of just over 2,000 kyat to the dollar.

On the open market, a greenback can fetch around 4,500 kyat.

"All my sisters are working, but there is no extra money at all," she said.

"In the past, we could buy two or three new items of clothing every month, but now we can't afford to buy new clothes, cosmetics or things for our personal care."

- Lights out -

Since the coup, Zara owner Inditex, Marks and Spencer and others have left Myanmar, citing the difficulties of operating amid the turmoil.

Others such as Adidas, H&M and Danish company Bestseller have stayed, for now.

Adidas told AFP it worked closely with its suppliers in Myanmar to safeguard workers' rights, while H&M said it was gradually phasing out its operations in the country.

Estimates of the apparel industry's export earnings vary.

Myanmar's commerce ministry said exports were worth more than $3 billion in the past financial year.

But the European Chamber of Commerce in Myanmar said export earnings were higher, surging from $5.7 billion in 2019 to $7.6 billion in 2022 -- with more than half of exports going to the bloc.

The European body said the rise in Myanmar exports was helped by low labour costs compared to Cambodia and China, along with trade preferences granted by the EU and United States.

Keeping the factories running is a challenge.

In May, the junta said the national electricity grid was meeting about half of the country's daily electricity needs.

To keep the lights on and the machines spinning, factory owners rely on expensive generators -- themselves vulnerable to the regular diesel shortages that plague Yangon.

"The working situation right now is like we invest more money and get less profits," said small factory owner Khin Khin Wai.

Cotton spindles have more than doubled in price from 18 cents to 50 cents, she said.

"Our lives here are not progressing year by year, they are falling apart," she said.

Wai Wai's factory supplies Danish clothing brand Bestseller.

A Bestseller spokesman told AFP that sourcing from Myanmar was "complex" and the company "continuously assessed" the situation, publishing regular reports on its operations in the country.

According to its September report, "on average" workers at Myanmar factories supplying it were paid a daily wage of 10,000-13,000 kyat ($5-6.50 at the official rate), including bonuses and overtime.

- Crackdown -

Abuses in the sector have spiked since the military took power, rights groups say.

This month, Swiss-based union federation IndustriALL Global Union said the junta had banned unions and arrested union leaders.

"There are widespread, comprehensive reports on the extensive violations of workers' rights," IndustriALL general secretary Atle Hoie said in a statement.

AFP has sought comment from the junta about conditions in the industry.

The latest concern is a conscription law enforced from February to shore up the military's depleted ranks.

In its most recent report on Myanmar, Bestseller said two workers at factories that supply it had been drafted between March and September of this year.

Women are included in the draft, although the junta has said it will not recruit them for now.

For migrant workers like Wai Wai who do not have the means to pay bribes to avoid any draft, it is a huge worry.

"I am full of fear about how I will face it if I am called up for conscription," Wai Wai said.

(Y.Yildiz--BBZ)

Advertisement Image