A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, June 21, 2013
Squeezed By The Global Economy
Why
do Bangladeshi garment workers feel compelled to work in hazardous
factories? People keep asking this since the factory collapse that
crushed 1,129 people to death near Dhaka. The answer lies in where these
young people are within the global economy: at work, they are
precariously at the bottom of the global garments value chain; at home,
they face steep cost of living rises from unpredictable global food and
commodity prices. Halima, 33 year old garments worker and mother of
three told researchers in 2012:
There is no guarantee for our job stability, what will happen
tomorrow only God knows … we cannot make any plans to save … I need
nutritious food for my health. But because there is not enough
nutritious food in my diet, my working capability is decreasing day by
day … working with needles doing garments work causes a severe headache …
If I concentrate to see something, everything seems dim-sighted to me
and my eyes fill with water. In fact, I don’t have the education for a
better job.
People like Halima are being squeezed by their place in the global
economy, and this is why they ‘choose’ to work in death-trap factories.
Since 2009, Dhaka garment workers have been among the people on low and
precarious incomes talking to researchers about how global economic
volatility plays out in their lives. In 2012, as part of the
Oxfam-Institute of Development Studies Life in a Time of Food Price Volatility project,
with fears of price spikes still live following the US drought, teams
spoke to people in 23 communities in Latin America, Sub-Saharan Africa
and South and Southeast Asia. The sense of a squeeze was widespread.
Food, fuel and other costs of living have risen since 2007, in some
cases, by double or treble or more. How well people eat is the single
best indicator of their wellbeing, and people on low incomes, like
Halima are not satisfied with what they eat: few nice and nutritious
foods, no protein to speak of, possibly contaminated fish or vegetables,
cheap additives for taste, and for the worst off, small or no meals at
all. Famine-type behaviours – gathering wild vegetables, eating what is
in effect livestock feed, and relying on ‘hunger’ recipes – are common.
Earning cash is pushing out other priorities. People take on higher risk
jobs, in garment factories notorious for poor safety records, or gold
mining in Burkina Faso. More women are out trying to earn cash to add to
the family budget than before, even where women traditionally stay at
home, as in Pakistan. This is having important but often overlooked
social costs that further squeeze the lives of people living in or near
poverty. The unpaid care work necessary for wellbeing at home is turning
into a juggling act, with grandparents and older children drafted in to
help with cooking and childcare, where possible. Food shopping has
become a marital battle zone: hard work does not guarantee a decent
meal, and men that fail to meet their families’ most basic needs feel
emasculated. And people can afford to help each other less, depending
more on earning a daily wage.
The good news should have been that wages and earnings are also rising,
mainly. Yet progress is illusory: in real terms, people feel their wages
are not keeping pace with five years of food price rises and they are
in fact worse off. Many worry they can no longer save or plan for the
future. Farming has become so uncertain that neither parents nor young
people themselves see it as their future – most avoid it as risky,
unrewarding, hard and dirty.
Policymakers are unlikely to worry that women are juggling paid and
unpaid work, or that men are feeling like failures. But they will want
to pay attention to what these changes add up to. Unchecked food price
rises are pushing out all other priorities: the importance once paid to
the invaluable work of caring for families and the social cohesion built
through socialising and helping neighbours are being replaced with
calculations about daily wage incomes and the cost of living. This is
social change by stealth, with people being dragged into the ever
tighter coils of the global economy.
The hidden costs of food price rises on individuals and communities will
worsen with time. Governments cannot indefinitely rely on the
‘resilience’ of individuals or the ability of families to absorb extra
unpaid care responsibilities. The assumption that communities will take
care of each other in times of stress will no longer hold.
Poor people expect their governments to stabilise food prices and listen
to their concerns about the cost of living. Yet their worries about
food price rises affect the things that matter in everyday life – how
they care for and live alongside each other – are not heard in global
food policy debates. Until they are, the pressures of life in a time of
food price volatility mean we are unlikely to have seen the end of
workers squeezed into dangerous factories.
*Naomi Hossain is a research fellow at the Institute of Development
Studies UK, and co-author of Squeezed: Life in a Time of Food Price
Volatility, Year 1 Results. She contributes to this column hosted by the
Centre for Poverty Analysis as a guest contributor. The Centre for Poverty Analysis (CEPA) is an independent, Sri Lankan think-tank promoting a better understanding of poverty related development issues.

