Towards Redistribution of Profits and Regulation of Garment GSCs The Asian garment labour movement has identified urgent structural shifts within garment GSCs that can address unequal and exploitative relationships between corporations in the global North and Asian garment workers and production countries. These structural shifts demand a redistribution of profits down the supply chains and this can be implemented with the following tools: Guaranteed, protected, adequate living wages: The Asian labour movement has long demanded the redistribution of profits in GSCs through a guaranteed and protected living wage. Whereas Asian suppliers are responsible for statutory and legal minimum wages within the country, brands must contribute, through legally binding mechanisms, to closing the growing gap between living wage and minimum wage. This requires strong labor market institutions which promote union driven and monitored processes for payment of living wages, such as the Wage Forward Campaign for Enforceable and Binding Agreements on Living Wages. Moving towards higher product pricing to adequately compensate workers: Fashion brands ensure their competitiveness within the fast fashion market by transferring the costs of manufacturing low-cost garments to Asian garment workers in the form of low, insecure and stagnant wages. To ensure fair redistribution of profits, a global readjustment towards higher prices by consumer markets and brands through a pricing model that enables adequate compensation is needed. Taxation of transnational corporations: In lower income countries tax revenue is more urgently needed due to lower per capita national incomes and a smaller percentage of national incomes converted to government revenue compared with developed countries. Despite this, TNCs drive developing economies to compete for investment by offering tax incentives, accelerating the race to the bottom. This harmful tax competition diverts potential revenue from where it is urgently needed, leaves developing countries more vulnerable in times of crisis, and belies sustainable recovery. To mitigate this, fashion brands must contribute to public spending on workers’ welfare and social security in production countries. Legal Paradigm for Brand Accountability: Asian garment workers and their trade unions are attempting to build a legal paradigm within garment GSCs that places the highest form of accountability on fashion brands, as joint employers of workers. Through these litigation efforts, the Asian garment labour movement demonstrates that brands set the terms and conditions of their employment, including access to work, secure contracts and adequate wages,

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