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View Full Version : WIKILEAKS: U.S. Fought To Lower Minimum Wage In Haiti So Hanes And Levis Would Stay C



Welshy
6th June 2011, 20:58
http://www.businessinsider.com/wikileaks-haiti-minimum-wage-the-nation-2011-6

A Wikileaks post published on The Nation shows that the Obama Administration fought to keep Haitian wages at 31 cents an hour. (This article was taken down by The Nation due to an embargo, but it was excerpted at Columbia Journalism Review (http://www.cjr.org/the_audit/a_pulled_scoop_shows_us_booste.php).)
It started when Haiti passed a law two years ago raising its minimum wage to 61 cents an hour. According to an embassy cable:
This infuriated American corporations like Hanes and Levi Strauss that pay Haitians slave wages to sew their clothes. They said they would only fork over a seven-cent-an-hour increase, and they got the State Department involved. The U.S. ambassador put pressure on Haiti’s president, who duly carved out a $3 a day minimum wage for textile companies (the U.S. minimum wage, which itself is very low, works out to $58 a day).
Haiti has about 25,000 garment workers. If you paid each of them $2 a day more, it would cost their employers $50,000 per working day, or about $12.5 million a year ... As of last year Hanes had 3,200 Haitians making t-shirts for it. Paying each of them two bucks a day more would cost it about $1.6 million a year. Hanesbrands Incorporated made $211 million on $4.3 billion in sales last year.
Thanks to U.S. intervention, the minimum was raised only to 31 cents.
These papers have come to light thanks to Haiti Liberte (http://haiti-liberte.com/), a small Haitian newspaper with offices in Port-au-Prince and New York City.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/wikileaks-haiti-minimum-wage-the-nation-2011-6#ixzz1OWmwQ68K

VirgJans12
6th June 2011, 21:01
Yes, we can! Keep Haitians work for 31 cents an hour.

Those people could have made twice as much now, even though that would still have been far below a reasonable salary.

Robocommie
6th June 2011, 21:34
Super-exploitation at work.

chegitz guevara
7th June 2011, 18:42
In the early 90s, during the coup period, the United States spent $200 MILLION through NGOs to keep Haiti from passing a minimum wage law.

The current minimum wage law came about when the comrades of Batay Ouvriere seized several hundred work places and demanded 200 gourds a day. Thanks to the U.S., they got 100/day.

Some people in the U.S. attack BO because they do not support Aristide (and never did). They claim that BO supports imperialism because they took money from the AFL-CIO to oppose Aristide, but BO's doesn't support any bourgeois politics.

Rakhmetov
7th June 2011, 18:49
This is no surprise but it still infuriates me!!!

Sodomize them with revolution!

http://www.zcommunications.org/wikileaks-cables-reveal-secret-history-of-u-s-bullying-in-haiti-at-oil-companies-behest-by-amy-goodman

Red Commissar
8th June 2011, 22:49
The OP's piece mentions The Nation taking it down- they've brought it back up and have set up a segment talking about the other problems the cables reveal.

There is the minimum wage one (http://www.thenation.com/article/161057/wikileaks-haiti-let-them-live-3-day), the attempts to sabotage the PetroCaribe deals (http://www.thenation.com/article/161056/wikileaks-haiti-petrocaribe-files), and finally the nature of the "elections" (http://www.thenation.com/article/161216/wikileaks-haiti-cable-depicts-fraudulent-haiti-election). There'll probably be more too.

It's what we all know- imperialist manipulation and exploitation of Haiti. It is nice to have some firm examples of it though- the actual cables themselves are at the wikileaks site.