How Boohoo's £3.75 Polo Shirt Indicates 'Modern Slavery'
by HULA on Jul 16, 2020
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A quick browse on Boohoo, you are greeted with a massive sales message -- “UP To 70% OFF EVERYTHING”. It is not uncommon for fashion retailers to bring out sales messages at least twice a year -- from Selfridges to ASOS, high-end to low-end, they all do it. But on a closer look, Boohoo’s lowest-priced item, a basic polo tee, dropped from £5 to £3.75 (yes, that rounds up to just about 36.5 HKD) with a 25% price drop. To put things into perspective, a McDonald’s meal in Hong Kong is worth about $40 HKD. So how is putting together a piece of clothing, which includes the sourcing of raw materials, treatments of fabrics, rent of factories, wages of textile and factory workers, and many more only add up to £3.75 per polo tee? A recent worker exploitation scandal featuring Boohoo, the ‘ultra-fast fashion’ company based in the UK, forces us to take a long and uncomfortable look at the consequences of the fast-fashion business model.
Just a few days ago on Monday, news broke that Boohoo shares plunged roughly 40% after revelations about poor working conditions in one of Boohoo’s contracted factories in Leicester were brought to the media’s attention. “Modern Slavery” was the term that showed up time and time again while conducting research for this article for a clear reason -- garment workers in said factory that supplied Boohoo were paid as little as £3.5 an hour, while the legal minimum wage in the UK is £8.72 per hour. In a failed attempt to try to relieve the situation, Boohoo terminated contracts with two suppliers, launched an investigation into its supply chain, and pledged £10 million towards strengthening suppliers’ compliance processes. Despite its delayed reaction towards the scandal, it has been dropped by ASOS, Next, Amazon and Zalando, amounting to total damage of £2 billion (of the company’s market capitalisation).
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