Regulated Child Labor Is Necessary in Developing Countries Child Labor and Sweatshops, 2006



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Regulated Child Labor Is Necessary in Developing Countries

Child Labor and Sweatshops, 2006

Although only recently recognized as a global concern, child labor has become the target of international attention and action. However, not all child labor is harmful or exploitative. Some kinds of work offer children constructive learning experiences, and child labor is essential for economic survival in most developing countries. Some of these countries resent the intrusion of Westerners who try to outlaw child labor without understanding its necessity. To eliminate child labor, it is necessary to end the conditions that cause it, including poverty, lack of educational opportunities, and low levels of development. This will require that countries put in place a system of political liberty and free market economies. In the meantime, better laws and enforcement are needed to eliminate exploitative child labor while allowing children who need to work to do so under safe and fair conditions.

To most Americans the problem of exploitative child labor disappeared generations ago with the passage of child labor laws and the elimination of dangerous "sweatshop" conditions. But the problem of child exploitation—an iniquitous subset of a much larger economically and socially legitimate and family-friendly culture of child work—is a living reality in many areas of the developing world, and the issue has commanded growing attention in the Western world.

As Sen. Joseph Biden (D-Delaware) told a U.S. Department of Labor hearing in 1997, "In an age of computers, fiber optics, and space travel, it is easy to forget that in many parts of the world—including our own backyard—children are sold into servitude, chained to machines, and forced to work under the most dangerous and unsanitary conditions. For most American consumers, the plight of these children has been as distant as a novel by Charles Dickens—not a present-day reality."

Some of that changed in 1998, however, when television personality Kathy Lee Gifford was accused of permitting the exploitation of children in Honduran factories that manufactured clothes bearing her designer label. Gifford denied the charge and testified against child abuse before Congress, thus defusing the issue at the time.

Yet most Americans still find the idea of abusing children for profit repugnant—notwithstanding the long tradition of child labor in U.S. industries and farms during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, a time when America itself was a developing country. A survey conducted by Marymount University found that more than three out of four Americans would avoid shopping at stores if they were aware that the goods sold were made by exploitative and abusive child labor.

The issue also reverberated against various U.S. sporting goods manufacturers, including Reebok, after allegations of abusive child labor conditions in soccer ball factories in Pakistan. These charges forced an overhaul of the soccer industry's approach to the child labor issue. Three concrete steps were undertaken by the industry in mid-1996: Subcontracting was eliminated, cooperation with the government was instituted, and monitoring of the soccer industry commenced.

In a 1998 hearing, Tom Cove, vice president of the Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association, told a Labor Department hearing that "I am proud to report today that the U.S. soccer industry, with the help of many essential partners, has been true to all three of these explicit commitments."

Recognizing the Need for Regulation

These are positive steps and reflect a mounting awareness that child labor abuse is a growing international problem that needs regulation. Sen. Tom Harkin (D-Iowa) is probably the nation's top lawmaker in this area. His Child-Labor-Free Consumer Information Act of 1997 would institute a voluntary labeling system for certifying that sporting goods and wearing apparel were made without child labor abuse.

"We need that," Harkin told a government panel, "because today the price we see for an item in a store—like a soccer ball or tennis shoes or a shirt or a blouse—tells us how much we have to pay for it. But it doesn't tell us how much someone else had to pay to make it."

The International Labor Organization (ILO) estimates that at least 250 million children between the ages of 5 and 14 are working, mostly in the developing world. About half of these work full time, while tens of millions work under conditions defined as "exploitative and harmful." The majority of the 250 million are found in Asia (61 percent), followed by Africa (32 percent) and Latin America and the Caribbean (7 percent).

Until recently, child labor was not a widely recognized global concern. It was not until 1993 that the U.S. Department of Labor, under congressional mandate, began researching and documenting the issue. International public attention regarding child labor has grown steadily over the past several years, however, and has provoked a global discussion of the problem and possible solutions.

In the spring of 1998, for example, over 1,400 NGOs [nongovernmental organizations] showed their concern over the plight of child workers by supporting the Global March Against Child Labor, a six-month- long march around the world. Large international conferences held in Stockholm, Amsterdam, and Oslo demonstrated support for ending abusive child labor.
Types of Child Labor

According to the ILO (Convention No. 138), the term child labor generally refers to any economic activity performed by a person under the age of 15. Not all of this, of course, is harmful or exploitative. Certain types of work, such as apprenticeship or family-related chores after school, can be a formative and constructive learning experience. But the type of child labor that has become the focus of international concern is the abusive, unhealthy, commercial exploitation of children that interferes with their education.

ILO statistics have listed the majority of working children as involved in agriculture, fishing, forestry, and hunting (61 percent). The remainder work in manufacturing (8 percent); retail and trade services (8 percent); community and personal services (7 percent); transport, storage, and communications (4 percent); construction (2 percent); and mining and quarrying (1 percent).

Agriculture: Payment based upon seasonal harvesting and seeding provides an incentive for parents to supplement their income dramatically by bringing their children into the fields with them at peak times. These children often start very young, since picking and digging can be performed as early as six or seven years of age.

In some countries, children comprise a significant percentage of the agricultural workforce. In parts of Mexico, this reaches 30 percent. In Kenya, it can top 50 percent during peak periods. In Brazil, close to 150,000 children work in severe heat during the six-month orange harvest season for as long as 12 hours a day.

Hazards in agriculture include sharp and unwieldy tools, bites from insects and snakes, unsafe vehicles, and regular exposure to toxic substances such as chemical fertilizers and pesticides.

Fishing: In the global fishing industry, children are employed to dive for fish, to work on docks or boats, or to peel and clean the catch. They often spend long hours in the water without protective gear and face hazards such as drowning, skin diseases, and shark attacks.

Manufacturing: Most child labor in manufacturing occurs in small workshops or in home-based work. Hazardous conditions include dangerous and unsupervised machinery, long hours, lack of protective gear, intense heat, poor lighting, bad ventilation, loud noise, and exposure to toxic substances.

Mining and quarrying: Child labor is common in small-scale mining and stone quarrying throughout the developing world. The number of children in this sector is relatively small, but the percentage of injuries is high. ILO statistics list one in every five girls and one in every six boys employed in mines and quarries as being affected by illness or injury.

Services: Children throughout the developing world work in a number of service-related tasks. Over 300,000 Filipino children work as domestic servants. In Bangladesh, a survey found that 24 percent of domestics were less than 10 years old. A study in Brazil found nearly 260,000 domestics between 10 and 14. In Peru, 80 percent of domestics are girls.

Such children typically perform household chores, run errands, provide child care, clean, do laundry, and cook. They often work long hours, receive little pay, and have few days off. In many cases, they receive harsh treatment from their employers.

Child prostitution is also common, particularly in Asia. Thailand, for example, has earned an international reputation for this offense, with thousands of girls from China and Southeast Asia regularly being kidnapped and sold to brothels in Bangkok and other Thai locales. This practice also takes place throughout the major urban centers of India, Pakistan, Africa, and Latin America.

Other service-related child labor is found in myriad occupations, including street vending, hotel and restaurant work, car repair, and construction.

The Culture of Child Labor

To combat exploitative child labor, it is necessary to consider carefully its various forms, to distinguish between legitimate work and illegitimate exploitation, and to appreciate the developmental and cultural context in which child labor exists. This may be difficult in a prosperous America, but there was, in fact, a time when children worked long and hard hours in the factories, stores, and farmlands of the young United States.

It is also important to remember that the gradual erosion of child labor in the United States occurred within the context of political liberty and free-market economics. This system remains the only reliable model for the elimination of the conditions that cause child labor in the first place.

There is wide consensus that harmful child labor is directly related to poverty. The countries with the highest illiteracy rates, lowest school enrollments, and the worst nutritional deficiencies employ the highest percentage of children. Beyond this level of generality, however, the phenomenon becomes more complex. Poverty is a general cause but far from the only one. Child labor is also associated with cultural traditions, lack of educational opportunities, and low levels of development. Imposing solutions outside the context of such social, economic, and cultural conditions has the potential to worsen the problem. Unless some alternative can be found for working children and their families, for example, many children dismissed from work will be forced to fend for themselves or will only adopt more hazardous forms of activity, including crime.

The American and Western revulsion over child labor is, in fact, by no means a universal concern. In some countries, child labor is defended as necessary for economic viability, often for survival itself. A major study by the Canadian International Development Agency, for example, noted: "The causes of child labor are varied. Poverty is the main but not the only cause.... Work is a matter of survival for children of poor families."

The social context, therefore, has to be taken into account alongside economic conditions. Lack of awareness, desperation, and indifference drive the problem in poor countries where children are used for perceived advantages. For one thing, children require less pay than adults. Another cause is the "nimble finger" argument—that is, that only children can perform certain delicate tasks. Child labor is also considered less troublesome than that of adults, because children are more docile.

Many developing countries resent the intrusion of the wealthy and industrial West, under the guise of "human rights," into their national workplace. Shabbin Jamal, for example, an adviser to Pakistan's Ministry of Labor, has deplored the Western world's "double standard" in failing to recognize what he sees as an economic need.

"Westerners conveniently forget their own shameful histories when they come here," he noted recently. "Europeans addressed slavery and child labor only after they became prosperous. Pakistan has only now entered an era of economic stability that will allow us to expand our horizons and address socialconcerns."

Indeed, the family and national need for child labor is regarded as a necessity in most developing nations. Healthy labor, under supervised conditions, can also be productive and rewarding in the growth of a child. Save the Children, an international alliance formed to protect the rights of working children, has been very explicit that the goal should be to eradicate exploitation rather than child labor itself. Calling blanket bans on work by children "dangerous," the group has also recognized that "work can be a way of children gaining skills and increasing their choices."

Thus, many analysts believe, reformers should keep in mind that the goal should be to end abuse and hazardous conditions, not necessarily the labor itself. Emotional responses, as occurred regarding Bangladesh recently, must be avoided. In this case, the United States threatened to ban all goods coming from Bangladesh garment makers who employed children, prompting the factory owners to fire all employees under 14. Deprived of their much-needed income, these children had to take on harmful and less lucrative work, with most of the girls resorting to prostitution.

The lesson here is that honest labor can be productive and profitable for young and old alike, and that employing children is an economic necessity for millions who cannot afford even the simplest of luxuries. Under proper and supervised conditions, children can advance their skills and range of career choices while helping to support their families. The issue is the condition of the workplace, not the work itself—but the whole issue is still huge and growing, with much left to be resolved.


The Need for Better Child Labor Laws and Enforcement

The elimination of exploitative child labor has recently become a worldwide priority. Most countries now have laws prohibiting work by children under a certain age and regulating working conditions for older children. But the problem for the moment is not the lack of legislation but its general inefficiency, leniency, and inconsistency. As a 1998 U.S. Department of Labor report stated, "Inadequate enforcement of child labor laws is a common problem throughout the world. Not all labor ministries are institutionally capable of enforcing child labor laws."

Both ILO Convention No. 138 and Article 32 of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child call on countries to establish a minimum wage, to regulate hours and working conditions, and to provide appropriate penalties and sanctions when such rules are not met. Many nations have ratified one or both of these conventions, but legislation and enforcement mechanisms often fall short of these standards.

A dramatic breakthrough took place in June 1999, however, when the ILO unanimously adopted a convention that requires all ratifying countries to "take immediate and effective measures" to eliminate the worst cases of child abuse. The U.S. Senate approved the treaty on November 5 [1999], and [then] President Clinton signed it into law during the World Trade Organization conference [in] December [1999], making the United States the first industrial nation to do so. The United States is also the largest contributor to the ILO's program to eliminate child labor, having increased its contribution from $3 million to $30 million for fiscal year 1999.

But the "war" on abusive child labor will require time and patience. [Former] Deputy Undersecretary of Labor Andrew Samet has noted that the issue is "in a sense, a time-bound question ... solvable within the next 15 years." This may be an optimistic forecast, but it's also an objective worth pursuing.
Source Citation

Tierney, John J. "Regulated Child Labor Is Necessary in Developing Countries." Child Labor and Sweatshops. Ed. Ann Manheimer. San Diego: Greenhaven Press, 2006. At Issue. Rpt. from "The World of Child Labor." The World & I Online. Vol. 15. 2000. 54. Opposing Viewpoints in Context. Web. 4 Jan. 2014.


Consumer Boycotts Are a Misguided Response to Sweatshops

Human Rights, 2004



Boycotts and other economic sanctions against sweatshops hurt, rather than help, workers in developing nations, Fred Smith claims in the following viewpoint. According to Smith, boycotts limit the economic opportunities for families in Asia and Latin America by closing down factories or preventing children—whose families need the income—from working. He argues that urbanization and industrialization are needed to improve economic conditions in the Third World. Smith is the founder of the Competitive Enterprise Institute, which provides market-based solutions to public policy problems.
Someone once noted that the law was amazingly equitable—it forbids both the king and the pauper to sleep beneath the bridge! And it is this form of equity that liberal ideologues of the world seek to impose on those less fortunate than we. Much of the world remains tragically impoverished—as the left when railing about income inequality never ceases to emphasize. The one-fifth of mankind that inhabits the United States, Europe, Japan and a handful of other places around the world are vastly better off than the rest of humanity. For most of them, choices such as whether to labor in a dismal factory in a tropical backwater long have disappeared into history but remain a tragic necessity for the poor of the developing world.

But those choices are real and painful. For too many families in Asia and Latin America children must contribute early on to the family income. These people lack the wealth to delay the entry of their offspring into the world of work until after they've gone to grammar school, much less college and graduate school. In traditional agricultural societies, children quickly move into the fields to work under the supervision of a family member or friend in the village. Having grown up in a poor rural farm community in Louisiana, I know well the results of that process—parasitic infestation (hookworms or worse) resulting in poor health and inattentiveness in school, early maturation and escape into early marriage or the military.


The Importance of Increasing Wealth

We all can hope that the developing world will gain the wealth that might allow their children to attend school, develop their intellectual capital and move into a more fulfilling adulthood. But increasing wealth is the vital prerequisite. To ban a painful choice because we would prefer a better choice is merely to push under the table the painful realities these people face.

Recall Western history: It was only the Industrial Revolution that gave poor people and their children the opportunity to escape into a somewhat better world. The "satanic mills" of England must be contrasted with the absolute horrors of traditional rural life. People moved into the urban sweatshops from the even sweatier life of farm serfdom.

Historical records show that average lifespans increased far more rapidly as urbanization and workforce participation increased. Families were able to afford some furniture, some tools, some reading materials, more than one change of clothes—pathetic accumulations but better than none at all.


Boycotts Do Not Work

The liberal scolds of the world love the symbolism of boycotting the evils of the global marketplace. America's chattering-class elites don't buy Reeboks or tropical-wood products or California grapes or an increasingly long list of products that are disapprovingly discussed at the cocktail parties of the rich and famous.

Yet the world isn't changed by symbolism but by reality. Such boycotts frequently are futile. And successful boycotts do nothing to increase family wealth in the developing world. On the contrary, the children who once were employed in the now-closed factories don't go back to school, much less aspire to college. Rather they go back into the fields or, even more tragically, in some cases become child prostitutes. Paternalism is far from unusual in the world—but does it help?

Boycotting the products of sweatshop labor is an attempt to dissolve options one wished didn't exist. It is the cheap out for the modern liberal. On the stateside economy this mind-set leads to calls to increase the minimum wage—to ensure that everyone has a "living wage." But what about the person who now has no wage at all? As Doug Bandow of the Cato Institute pointed out, welfare recipients in states that have raised the minimum wage remained on welfare 44 percent longer than those in states that did not take this moral step. Conclusion: Raising the minimum-wage bar makes advocates for the downtrodden feel better but is actually bad for the poor. Minimum wages are bad policy at any time; in today's booming economy, they are especially costly. For the first time since WWII, employers are willing to reach into the ranks of the (once) unemployable, to make the investments in training that would give these people a real chance to gain economic independence. Minimum-wage increases threaten to reduce that hope.

Internationally, the same moralistic sentiments that lead to minimum-wage laws at home lead to protectionist policies abroad. American consumers are urged to boycott products from Myanmar because the regime there has too little regard for human rights. Our chattering classes talk smugly about trade sanctions, when in fact trade provides one of the very few windows available to the struggling citizens of Myanmar. Do the Burmese elites notice the effects of these sanctions? The Burmese poor certainly do. Or, we are told, "Boycott United Fruit and buy only Rainforest Crunch"—that will certainly fail to increase living standards in the jungles of Latin America.
The Damage Caused by Liberal Policies

Liberals are precious—their love is for humanity as an abstraction. Meanwhile, individual people must fend for themselves. Liberal policies may be motivated by moral values but, in practice, they do more damage than have any imperialist policies in history. Protectionist policies motivated by moral concerns curtail trade in exactly those countries most in need of openings to the world. Such moves deny the poor of the world the self-help measures that provide the first rungs on the ladder out of poverty. At best, the liberals would promote the dependency-producing welfare state as a substitute for trade. Liberals redistribute wealth; they do not create it—that requires sweat and liberals aren't into sweat.

And if the United Students Against Sweatshops get their way, the World Trade Organization, the only positive international organization, will become an arm of Greenpeace, Amnesty International and [consumer activist] Ralph Nader's brigades. Economic protectionists—labor unions and their corporate allies—have forged an unholy alliance with these groups. Protectionists have become cross- dressers—seeking to cloak their traditional special-interest cause in moral garb. They must not be allowed to succeed.

In effect, advocates of consumer boycotts seek to implement in other countries a liberal vision that is increasingly discredited here at home. It's as if they are saying, "The poor may not be able to afford our level of regulation but by God they're going to get the chance." And if progressivism fails there, too, and the poor are made even worse off, they can always say, "Well, we tried!"

Progressivism no longer can do much damage here at home—Americans no longer are listening to liberal polemicists—but the poor of the world remain vulnerable. American supermarkets and department stores don't need to buy from Burma or tropical villagers or Bangladeshi school children. If a boycott is threatened, the Levi-Strauss firms of America simply will shift to a less controversial substitute. The producer won't suffer; the wealthier customers will never notice—although the working poor will find their choices narrowing dramatically. Most tragically, the thwarted dreams of the child in Asia will never be heard at all on nightly news. Instead, we will hear only tales of moral triumph from a compliant media. A proud Mattel will note that "we sell toys to children—we don't ask children to make toys!"
What Americans Should Do

Americans have a proud egalitarian tradition. As a child I was proud when a friend working in Latin America discussed his policy of paying local workers the same rate as Americans. His attitude—the traditional American view—is that merit, not ethnicity, should determine outcome. But that egalitarian view has been subverted into a form of radical egalitarianism which argues for equality of outcome—even when we have no meaningful way of bringing about that outcome. Americans should seek a world where children will not have to go into the fields or the factories, where they too will have the opportunity to build intellectual capital for the future. Tragically, that day is not yet. Today, people must painfully accumulate tiny amounts of capital through family efforts, and, for many, only open world trade offers them an opportunity to climb out of poverty.

America, of course, has its own special poverty problems. For example, some religious communities, such as the Amish, hold beliefs that make it difficult for them to participate fully in the American prosperity. Their traditional non-technological lifestyle makes it critical for their children to contribute to family income very early in life. And Congress has enacted laws to allow them to work at an early age under conditions that many of us well might find distasteful. Our reasons for doing so are understandable. Americans respect religious beliefs—even those we do not support—and we recognize that allowing Amish children to labor in their communities may help them reach responsible adulthood. Indeed, even strong opponents of child labor recognize that value. Representative George Miller, a California Democrat, noted that "child labor contributes to family income and can even train children for future work." In tomorrow's Internet economy sanctions against child labor take on an even more oppressive note because there is every reason to believe that even some school-age children will be able to leapfrog from poverty to prosperity by working at home on laptop computers. Do we really wish to let child-labor restrictions hamstring the Bill Gates of the next generation?

Sadly, leaders of consumer boycotts who drape themselves in the banner of a children's crusade will not protect the children of the world. It even may be argued that such is not really their purpose. Liberal protectionists' real goal is to protect their liberal sensitivities. How much more pleasant to ban all ugliness from the world. Boycotts, global child-labor laws, sanctions against developing-world products, minimum- wage laws—all are motivated not primarily by the desire to help the poor but rather to protect liberals from reality shock.

And to those who argue that we must increase the wealth of these people so that their children would not have to work, we must ask: But how? Show us a practical way of achieving that desirable result. To cut off painful options based on the theoretical argument that such choices should not be necessary is to assuage an elitist aesthetic concern at the expense of those who would have desperately preferred freedom to choose. Trade offers a slow escape from poverty. Feel-good remedies leave the poor anchored in place. But escapist fantasies are too high a price to pay for boycott policies whose only connection to civility and humaneness is their superficial attractiveness.



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