The sacrifices workers are making can range from short term, like heat and sickness, to long term affects, like death. One of the main sacrifices that workers make for our cheap clothing is their own health and safety. The collapse of Rana Plaza lead to a death toll of around 1,000 garment workers (The True Cost). Following the collapse of Rana Plaza companies realized that something needed to change. “H&M, Zara, Walmart, Gap, and other major brands announced they’d fund and oversee factory inspections in Bangladesh” (Vara). According to Vauhini, people figured that if companies were more vigilant then it would prevent incident like this from happening again. Vauhini continue to write that vigilance isn’t enough (Vara). They reason that this isn’t enough is because consumers are always going to want the cheapest prices and for companies to profit they need sweatshops that pay workers low wages and put them in bad conditions. Sarah Labowitz, a co-director of New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights states, “You can’t, on one hand, have lower prices and on the other hand have rising standards”(Vara). If consumers or companies are pushing for better conditions then they have to realize that prices are going to increase. The sad reality of that is, people aren’t willing to pay more to benefit someone else’s
The sacrifices workers are making can range from short term, like heat and sickness, to long term affects, like death. One of the main sacrifices that workers make for our cheap clothing is their own health and safety. The collapse of Rana Plaza lead to a death toll of around 1,000 garment workers (The True Cost). Following the collapse of Rana Plaza companies realized that something needed to change. “H&M, Zara, Walmart, Gap, and other major brands announced they’d fund and oversee factory inspections in Bangladesh” (Vara). According to Vauhini, people figured that if companies were more vigilant then it would prevent incident like this from happening again. Vauhini continue to write that vigilance isn’t enough (Vara). They reason that this isn’t enough is because consumers are always going to want the cheapest prices and for companies to profit they need sweatshops that pay workers low wages and put them in bad conditions. Sarah Labowitz, a co-director of New York University’s Stern Center for Business and Human Rights states, “You can’t, on one hand, have lower prices and on the other hand have rising standards”(Vara). If consumers or companies are pushing for better conditions then they have to realize that prices are going to increase. The sad reality of that is, people aren’t willing to pay more to benefit someone else’s