Workers and social upgrading in "fast fashion": The case of the apparel industry in Morocco and Romania

Over the past three decades the global economy has witnessed the rise of organizationally fragmented and geographically dispersed global production networks (GPNs). An increasing amount of literature drawing on chain and network conceptualizations has accumulated on how these changes affect countries, regions and firms. Comparatively little has, however, been said about the effects on workers and their roles in GPNs. Although the expansion of global production arrangements has been an important source of employment generation in many developing and transition countries, this quantitative assessment reveals little about the qualitative aspects of work nor about the sustainability of these jobs. This paper assesses how integration into GPNs in the increasingly important fast fashion apparel segment, that is based on increased variety and fashionability and on permanently shrinking product life cycles, is impacting on workers and social upgrading. It particularly assesses whether the sourcing practices related to fast fashion, such as short lead times, high flexibility, speed of production, low costs and high quality, create additional hurdles for workers to achieve social upgrading. The focus is on the apparel industry in Central and Eastern Europe and in the Euro-Mediterranean Rim ("Greater Europe") with case studies on Morocco and Romania due to their importance as regional and fast fashion suppliers to Western European buyers.

[1]  G. Gereffi,et al.  Economic and Social Upgrading in Global Production Networks: A New Paradigm for a Changing World , 2011 .

[2]  Kate Raworth Trading Away Our Rights: Women Working in Global Supply Chains , 2004 .

[3]  Jane Lou Collins,et al.  Threads: Gender, Labor, and Power in the Global Apparel Industry , 2003 .

[4]  Adrian Smith,et al.  Reconfiguring ‘post‐socialist’ regions: cross‐border networks and regional competition in the Slovak and Ukrainian clothing industry , 2008 .

[5]  Jennifer Bair Frontiers of Commodity Chain Research , 2008 .

[6]  Lesley O'Connell,et al.  Counting the Invisible Workforce: The Case of Homebased Workers , 1999 .

[7]  G. Standing Global Feminization Through Flexible Labor: A Theme Revisited , 1999 .

[8]  H. Yeung,et al.  Global production networks and the analysis of economic development , 2002 .

[9]  R. Freeman,et al.  Can Labor Standards Improve Under Globalization ? , 2005 .

[10]  G. Graziani Globalization of Production in the Textile and Clothing Industries: The Case of Italian Foreign Direct Investment and Outward Processing in Eastern Europe , 1998 .

[11]  J. Pickles,et al.  Clothing Workers after Worker States: The Consequences for Work and Labour of Outsourcing, Nearshoring and Delocalisation in Postsocialist Europe , 2010 .

[12]  S. McGrath-Champ,et al.  Handbook of Employment and Society , 2010 .

[13]  M. Carr,et al.  Globalization, Social Exclusion, and Work: With Special Reference to Informal Employment and Gender , 2004 .

[14]  S. Barrientos,et al.  Do workers benefit from ethical trade? Assessing codes of labour practice in global production systems , 2007 .

[15]  C. Staritz,et al.  Making the Cut?: Low-Income Countries and the Global Clothing Value Chain in a Post-Quota and Post-Crisis World , 2010 .

[16]  J. Wills,et al.  Threads of Labour , 2005 .

[17]  D. Weil,et al.  The Future of the Apparel and Textile Industries: Prospects and Choices for Public and Private Actors , 2006 .

[18]  Melani Cammett,et al.  Business-Government Relations and Industrial Change: The Politics of Upgrading in Morocco and Tunisia , 2007 .

[19]  S. Luce The case for international labour standards : a "Northern" perspective , 2005 .

[20]  G. Gereffi,et al.  Commodity Chains and Global Capitalism , 1994 .

[21]  G. Gereffi The Organization of Buyer-Driven Global Commodity Chains: How U.S. Retailers Shape Overseas Production Networks. , 1994 .

[22]  G. Gereffi,et al.  The Global Apparel Value Chain, Trade and the Crisis: Challenges and Opportunities for Developing Countries , 2010 .

[23]  Frederick H. Abernathy,et al.  A Stitch in Time: Lean Retailing and the Transformation of Manufacturing—Lessons from the Apparel and Textile Industries , 1999 .

[24]  C. Sellar The relationship between the processes of outsourcing of Italian textile and clothing firms and the emergence of industrial districts in Eastern Europe , 2007 .

[25]  Adrian Smith,et al.  Cutting It: European Integration, Trade Regimes, and the Reconfiguration of East–Central European Apparel Production , 2003 .

[26]  G. Gereffi,et al.  The Global Apparel Value Chain: What Prospects for Upgrading by Developing Countries? , 2003 .

[27]  K. Doyle Can Labor Standards Improve Under Globalization , 2004 .

[28]  Mark S. Granovetter Economic Action and Social Structure: The Problem of Embeddedness , 1985, American Journal of Sociology.

[29]  Stefano Ponte,et al.  Trading Down: Africa, Value Chains And The Global Economy , 2005 .

[30]  Libran Cabactulan,et al.  General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) , 1981 .

[31]  Remmer Sassen,et al.  Corporate social responsibility reporting , 2018, NachhaltigkeitsManagementForum | Sustainability Management Forum.

[32]  Gill Seyfang,et al.  New Hope or False Dawn? , 2001 .

[33]  The Research Department. , 1921, Nature.

[34]  J. Pellegrin The Political Economy of Competitiveness in an Enlarged Europe , 2001 .

[35]  P. Chemetov,et al.  Ministère de l'Economie et des Finances , 1989 .

[36]  T. Palley The economic case for international labour standards , 2004 .

[37]  G. Gereffi International trade and industrial upgrading in the apparel commodity chain , 1999 .