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Indian Home-Based Workers Suffer Conditions Worse Than Sweatshops

Restricted to their homes, they engage in providing low-paid manufacturing for global supply chains.

Published
India
3 min read
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Hindi Female

Every day, after she finishes cooking, cleaning and fetching water for her tiny one-room home in Mumbai, Saubhagya Nadelkari picks up a stack of leather strips and makes her way to her neighbour’s home.

There, in a narrow alley that is covered with plastic, about half a dozen women sit or stand as they braid long strips for use in belts, sandals and bags. They talk and laugh as their fingers fly, knotting each strip at the end when it is done.

I have been doing this for about 10 years. We used to get more work, now we get less, and get paid less. We only get paid once in six months, and they don’t keep proper accounts. But my husband doesn’t let me go out and work, and we need the money, so I can’t say ‘no’ to the work.
Nadelkari

Nadelkari makes about 100 pieces a day. She is paid about 24 rupees ($0.40) for a set of 12 finished pieces.

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Nadelkari and her friends are among nearly 38 million home-based workers in India, according to a 2012 survey by WIEGO, a global non-profit focused on informal workers.

Restricted to their homes because of limited mobility and lack of childcare, they are engaged in providing low-paid manufacturing or services for local and global supply chains. These women stitch garments, embroider and attach sequins, make shoe uppers, handicrafts, as well as roll incense sticks and prepare food items such as pickles.

Unlike self-employed home-based workers who sell their output directly, sub-contracted homeworkers are dependent on a middleman who drops off and picks up orders and keeps a part of the payment as commission.

They are affected by fluctuating demand, cancelled orders, delayed payments and rejected goods.



Restricted to their homes, they engage in providing low-paid manufacturing for global supply chains.
A sweatshop (Photo Courtesy: Flickr/Marissaorton)
These are the most invisible of informal workers. Their situation is worse than a sweatshop, because at least in the sweatshop they don’t have to pay for electricity and water and rent and they get paid regularly. 
Indira Gartenberg, researcher at LEARN
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Economic Compulsion

In India, the world’s fastest growing major economy, more than 90 percent of workers – or about 400 million people – are in the informal economy, according to the Centre for Equity Studies.

Women and children in the informal economy are particularly vulnerable to exploitation.

The garment industry is particularly prone to abuse. Of the 38 million home-based workers in India, about 45 percent are involved in making garments or textiles, and half these workers are sub-contracted homeworkers, according to WIEGO.

The piece-rate work that is common in the industry is low paid and seasonal. While the women do the bulk of the work, children pitch in during busy periods, even skipping school to work.



Restricted to their homes, they engage in providing low-paid manufacturing for global supply chains.
Residents walk in an alley in Dharavi, one of Asia’s largest slums, in Mumbai. (Photo: Reuters)
Contract work for textiles has been growing exponentially because of the growing popularity of ready made garments and fast fashion. Many leading global brands are outsourcing to homeworkers, even if they are unaware of it. Homeworkers are the most vulnerable in the chain, yet they bear a lot of risks because the economic compulsion is so strong.
Shalini Sinha, WIEGO
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The supply chains of global fashion retailers have come under greater scrutiny since the Rana Plaza disaster in Bangladesh three years ago.

Despite pressure from activists, India has not endorsed the International Labour Organization’s convention 177, which requires member nations to adopt a national policy to improve the lives of homeworkers.

That includes counting them as labourers, and providing social security protection and adequate remuneration. Activists including WIEGO are also campaigning for secure contracts, social protection, better remuneration and unions.

For Nadelkari in Dharavi, a sprawling slum that is home to thousands of home workers, all of these would be welcome.

“Until then, at least I get to do the work with my friends. We talk, we laugh. We forget how hard it is,” she said.

(Published in an arrangement with Thomson Reuters Foundation)

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Topics:  dharavi 

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