THEY PLAN HIGH END CLOTHING MANUFACTURE – BUT WILL THEY PAY HIGH END WAGES – NOT LIKELY…IT WILL STILL BE THE $0.69 PER HOUR OFFERED BY CLINTON

Industrial Revolution II LP (IRII), a new company in Haiti, will launch the manufacturing of high-end clothing in the country, with support from the Inter American Development Bank (IDB).

The new company Industrial Revolution II LP (IRII) will receive a loan of up to $1 million from the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB), allowing it to retrofit and equip a garment factory in Port-au-Prince and train workers living at the base of the economic pyramid in Haiti. IRII’s project to introduce high-end manufacturing in Haiti is sponsored by an investment group that is headed by Joelle Berdugo Adler, the founder of the Montreal-based ONExONE Foundation, which operates in Canada, the United States and Haiti; Richard Coles, a Haitian textile executive, and Robert Broggi, a Boston-based finance industry executive.

The textile and apparel industry is Haiti’s largest manufacturing sector, accounting for 80% of exports and around 10% of GDP in 2010, before the earthquake struck. Even with Haiti’s proximity to the United States and preferential access to U.S. markets, the apparel industry in the country continues to focus on producing high-volume, low-margin apparel for the mass market, where producers continuously move from country to country in search of the lowest- cost production location. Thanks to IDB´s financing, IRII will introduce an innovative model for apparel manufacturing in the country that radically departs from the prevailing paradigm of low-cost production of commodity garments.

“The IDB is supporting IRII because we believe the project can change the paradigm for apparel manufacturing in Haiti by demonstrating the feasibility of producing higher-quality products that yield greater benefits to workers, the local community and the country,” said Rahul Desai, the project team leader at the IDB’s Opportunities for the Majority initiative (OMJ).

Having identified the need from fashion and “fast-fashion” designers and retailers in North America for nearby sources of supply that can respond quickly to changing market needs with smaller production runs, IRII will hire local workers (mainly women) who will be trained to produce high-end apparel utilizing the latest manufacturing technologies and adhering to superior social and environmental standards.

The project will not only generate direct employment for low-income Haitians, but will also provide training to enhance the skill level of Haitian apparel industry workers and managers and allocate 50% of profit distributions to programs for employees, their families, and the local community.

Learn more about OMJ :
The IDB’s Opportunities for the Majority (OMJ) promotes and finances market-based, sustainable business models that engage companies, local governments and communities in the development and delivery of quality products and services for people at the base of pyramid in Latin America and the Caribbean.

HL/ HaitiLibre

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COMMENT: HAITIAN-TRUTH.ORG
I really hate those do-gooders who continually use the words “sweat-shop” to describe any foreign effort that does not pay American wages to their work force.

Having said this, the concept of driving a work force to produce top end clothing at T-shirt wages will see real people organizing a union to strike for fair wages. $1.00 per hour is hardly enough to exist, and pay for kid’s school.

And, education is Haiti’s only  hope for escaping its current condition.

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