Share FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinWhatsappTelegramEmail 355 H&M entered the South African market last year with its 4,700m² flagship store at V&A Waterfront in Cape Town. Swedish clothing retailer H&M wants to set up shop in Ethiopia since production costs there are cheaper than in the Far East. Other clothing manufacturers are hesitating. Could Ethiopia become the next Bangladesh? Ethiopia’s economy just keeps growing – since 2007 at times with double-digit leaps and bounds. “The Economist” projects that the country will experience annual growth of 7 to 8 percent through 2016. Ethiopia’s government is apparently placing special emphasis on the textile industry – by 2016, the country aims to export more than a billion dollars worth of apparel. Factories established by the likes of H&M are more than welcome. More Articles You Would Love Here Is Why Ghanaians Are Celebrating British Vogue’s New Editor-In-Chief Edward Enninful Talented Senegalese Designer Diarra Bousso Presents Her 2014 Fall Collection According to a supplier, the Swedish chain wants to produce more than a million items of clothing per month in the East African nation. A company spokesperson confirmed that test runs have already been ordered from Ethiopian producers. Cheaper than China Many producers have in the past relocated production to countries that offered cheap labor, like Bangladesh or China. But in such countries, social standards have risen along with wages – while the world seems to be examining production conditions increasingly critically. So producers have started considering new options for cheap labor. On the African continent, Morocco and Tunisia are known as clothing production countries, mostly for discount apparel. Other African countries, like Ghana or Kenya, don’t play much of a role in the fashion industry, according to GermanFashion, a German industry association. Ethiopia offers a number of advantages, said Thomas Ballweg, a procurement and technical consultant at GermanFashion. “On the one hand are the lower costs – much lower than in China – with 80 million people living there. And, it’s near the sea – and quick to get to Europe via the Suez Canal,” Ballweg said. This could shorten delivery time by a third compared with coming from the Far East. In addition, Ethiopia’s climate and that of neighboring countries is well-suited for the cultivation of cotton, Ballweg emphasized. As long as the cotton was of high enough quality, clothing producers could save on expensive import by using local materials. No new Bangladesh Apart from H&M, British supermarket chain Tesco and Ireland-based discount textile company Primark also produce in Ethiopia, according to GermanFashion. Observers warn that Ethiopia could become another Bangladesh, with textile factory workers laboring under scandalous conditions. Reports recur of Bengali factories burning down and causing numerous deaths. In April the textile factory collapsed, killing more than a thousand people. Christoph Kannengiesser of the German-African Business Association told DW he can’t imagine such a fate for Ethiopia – even discount apparel companies like H&M or Primark are concerned about their reputation. “For a company with a brand name that relies on its clientele’s approval, it would be a disaster for it to become known that social or environmental standards are not being kept,” Kannengiesser said. He said standards set by the International Labor Organization and World Trade Organization are high enough, adding that that numerous non-governmental organizations and other independent groups monitor production conditions in countries with cheap labor. Chance for society Unlike in the electronics industry, workers in the textile industry do not need to be highly qualified, which Kannengiesser pointed out, allows members of lower social classes a working future – a benefit to all of society in the long term. “The more people who are working – and the more people who are able to feed themselves, pay for healthcare and education for their children – the better the chances are for the educational level of society to increase,” Kannengiesser said. He pointed to such developments in Asia, which were only made possible by investment in the textile industry. Ethiopia’s textile industry goes back to 1939, when the first factories were established during Fascist Italy’s occupation of the country. During the Cold War, foreign communists collaborated with Ethiopia’s then communist government in the textile sector. Some of those plants are still in service. But the country’s infrastructure is poor: Roads are bad and only 15 percent of the population has electricity. Drop in the bucket H&M has said that it does not intend to reduce or close production at locations in Asia. And GermanFashion doesn’t think that Ethiopia will develop into a new textile hub – the country’s production is far too small relative to global production. Of the 13 billion euros ($17.4 billion) made each year from clothing imports to Germany, Ethiopia produces just a fraction of a percent. The value of Ethiopian textile imports to Germany in 2012 was 22 million euros ($29.4 million), Ballweg said. “That’s just a drop in the bucket and not the huge market some make it out to be,” he said. “We haven’t seen that yet.” Original Article: AllAfrica.com cheapethiopiafashionh and mh&mlaborlabourproduction Share FacebookTwitterPinterestLinkedinWhatsappTelegramEmail Nana Tamakloe Founder of FashionGHANA.com and Accra Fashion Week. 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