Shein denies low prices due to forced labour

Shein denies low prices due to forced labour

PARIS
Shein denies low prices due to forced labour

Chinese cut-price fast-fashion giant Shein defended its business model, saying demand-based production accounted for its low prices and not forced or cheap labour.     

Founded in China in 2008, Shein has swiftly claimed a top place in the global fast-fashion marketplace, offering young social-media-savvy customers low-priced collections that turn over at a steady clip.    

The Singapore-based firm’s strategy chief Peter Pernot-Day told AFP that Shein is “an on-demand manufacturer... the global pioneer of this technology” during a visit to Paris to attend the opening of a Shein pop-up store.    

Testing products with a small run and spooling up production if there was demand meant Shein has eliminated “inventory risk”, Pernot-Day said, wiping out “the most significant component of garment cost”.    

Shein’s sales rose 60 percent in 2021 to $16 billion worldwide, Bloomberg reported - just behind Swedish high-street name H&M.    

With 11,000 employees worldwide and counting, Shein has big plans for further expansion.    

“It’s important to have teams that are in the countries and geographies and regions where we are doing business,” Pernot-Day said.    

The “localisation” strategy includes building a 40,000-square-metre new warehouse in Poland allowing faster deliveries to the European market.    

“There will be more,” he added.    

Online, Shein plans to create a digital marketplace that will allow shoppers to buy other products from other brands through its platform.    

Pernot-Day said the fashion and lifestyle shopping experience would resemble a “digital grand magasin”, referring to Paris’ swanky department stores.            

But relentless expansion of sales and production is exactly what NGOs and some governments hold against Shein, saying its low costs cannot be compatible with fair treatment of labour or the environment.    Pernot-Day insisted that doing away with the risk of being left with unsold inventory and warehousing accounted for its ability to offer extremely low prices, such as T-Shirts for just $5.5.    

“We are able to accurately measure... demand and only produce enough garments to meet that,” he said.    

Shein’s efforts to green its image include a second-hand clothing business in the United States, materials research and integrating recycled materials in its products.    

While acknowledging “fair criticism” that its product pages offer consumers little detail about recycled content and other traceability factors, “we’re trying to enhance how we describe and categorise our products,” Pernot-Day said.    

He insisted that Shein is “very connected digitally” with suppliers’ information about sourcing.    

The company carried out up to 300,000 chemical tests this year alone, Pernot-Day said, adding that it worked with Oritain, a product analysis firm that also works with the US government.    

“We’re still learning,” he added. “The challenge is that we have a lot of suppliers, lots of products”.    

Pernot-Day also maintained that Shein has “no suppliers in Xinjiang” in northwestern China, where aid groups have accused it of using forced labour by Uyghur people.    

US lawmakers recently asked the SEC financial watchdog to require an independent investigation into allegations of forced Uyghur labour at several brands including Shein.    

But the company uses a US government forced labour blacklist “to look at our supply chain and understand whether or not the companies are in there,” Pernot-Day said.    

And when allegations are made of copied goods being sold on Shein, “if it is (proved), we remove it from sale, if not, we won’t,” he added, although “this is a difficult legal question”.    

“We’ve seen a reduction of the number of complaints against us” for intellectual property violations, Pernot-Day said.

Economy,