articulating economies by disarticulating elsewhere:
The low prices enjoyed by shoppers at British supermarkets are paid for by poor wages, job insecurity and a denial of basic human rights for workers in some of the world's poorest countries, a report has concluded. The growing power of big supermarkets is the driving force behind a mode of doing business that is made possible by exploiting workers, particularly women, in developing countries, the report says.
(...) The document, produced by the development agency ActionAid, accuses the supermarkets, who take £7 out of every £10 spent on the high street, of using their vast market power to drive down prices at their overseas suppliers.
(...) ActionAid claims that shopping could become a "tool for poverty reduction" if supermarkets treat their suppliers better so that more of the millions of pounds spent every day on grocery shopping in the UK flowed back to the workers producing what Britons buy. "This is how development happens," it says. An investigation into how bananas are grown in Costa Rica found that workers' rights, pay and conditions have suffered from the intense price war that rages between UK grocers. Suppliers are forced to absorb the costs of the banana price battle because they need the business: supermarkets typically take between 70 per cent and 90 per cent of a banana supplier's stocks. [it´s the logic of the individual capitalist, mr. actionaid]
(...) In the Indian cashew growing industry, ActionAid found that for every pound shoppers spent on the nut in UK supermarkets just 1p went to the women workers who processed the nuts. Another 22p was shared between Indian farmers, traders, processing companies and exporters, leaving 77p for importers, roasters and supermarkets in the UK.
(...) Bindi, a 58-year-old mother of six, from Kerala in India, works for a large processing company that exports cashew nuts to the UK market. "I have severe pain in my toes and knees and sometimes back pain. But I have to work to fend for myself and my family," she said. Bindi's hands are covered in blisters. Asked why she does not wear protective gloves, she said: "We have to buy the gloves ourselves; the management does not provide us with gloves. Besides, I will only be able to shell five kilos if I wear gloves instead of the usual 10." She said: "The managers use malpractices and underweigh the shelled nuts." A survey found that 45 per cent of cashew workers experience respiratory illnesses, compared with 9 per cent of the wider population. "They will make us sit in the smoke-filled sheds where they fry the nuts and it causes suffocation," said Bindi. Cashew workers' main concern is their earnings and, in Kerala, most women want their unions to bargain for higher wages.
collected snippets of immediate importance...

Monday, April 23, 2007
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