Garment workers protest wage levels in Bangladesh this month. (Kazi Salahuddin Razu/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

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16 November 2023

Organisations representing more than 2,500 international brands, retailers and suppliers said the country’s new minimum wage for garment workers is too low to basic needs.

Ethical fashion trade groups representing more than 2,500 international brands, retailers and suppliers have written to Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to express concerns over controversial changes to the country’s minimum wage for garment workers.

The apparel manufacturing hub announced a 60 percent increase in basic salaries for sector last week, but the substantial hike still fell well short of what unions say is needed to lift wages above poverty levels. Protests ongoing since late October have been met with a harsh crackdown that left several people dead.

In a letter sent to the country’s prime minister this week, the Fair Labour Association, Amfori, Ethical Trading Initiative, Fair Wear and Mondiaal FNV asked the government to reconsider its decision on wage levels, according to a press release from FLA.

The organisation, whose members collectively source from nearly 3,000 factories in Bangladesh, said the proposed new minimum wage is too low and contradicts the government’s commitment to decent work standards, the release said.