Apparel Online Bangladesh Magazine February Issue 2019 | Page 16
COVER STORY
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Workers’ unrest sends
industry into a tailspin
› The more than a week-long agitation by the garment workers in the beginning of 2019 is loaded with
implications… Team Apparel Online traces the entire development – cause and effect, to throw some light
on this very complicated and unfortunate incident.
It has been a long wait for the workers to finally witness the hike in minimum wages,
keeping with the recommendations of the minimum wage board – which itself went
through a lot of twists and turns with workers’ bodies and civil societies joining hands to
put in their demands as to what should be the new wage structure.
A
more than fifty per cent
increase in minimum wage
– well-accepted by the apparel
makers, who are already stretched
thin by falling margins and
increasing overheads – the new
rule with regard to minimum wage
A. H. Aslam Sunny, Managing Director, Crony Group
structure was expected to sort out the
workers’ demand for a wage increase.
This in turn would ensure that the
industry could move ahead with a
renewed thrust towards achieving its
goal of earning US $ 50 billion from
apparel exports by 2021. As the New
Gazi Mahabubul Alam, Director, Mahmud Group
16 Apparel Online Bangladesh | FEBRUARY 2019 | www.apparelresources.com
Year dawned and the industry was
busy planning its course of action
to achieve the goal, the workers,
rather than reporting to work, hit the
streets to protest what they called
discrepancies in the wage structure.
The workers alleged that the monthly
wage in the seventh grade has
been increased to Taka 8,000 from
Taka 5,300 as per the latest gazette
published by the Government last
year, but the salaries of the workers
in other grades have reportedly not
been increased at the same rate.
It may be mentioned here that in
September last year, the Government
raised the minimum monthly wage for
RMG workers by around 51 per cent
to Taka 8,000 from Taka 5,300, which
took effect from December.
However, as per the workers, the
agitation was more of an outcome of
concerns over ‘discriminatory’ wage
hike with no evaluation of merit and
experience in the new pay structure.
According to them, a newcomer who
joined in December, under the new
structure will get a wage of Taka 8,000
and people working for several years
now and those who have experience,
will also be receiving close to what a
newcomer would get. Further, many