Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03RANGOON1425
2003-11-07 06:34:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Rangoon
Cable title:  

BURMA SANCTIONS: GARMENT MAKERS CLING TO LEAKY RAFT

Tags:  ETRD KTEX ELAB PHUM PGOV BM 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 RANGOON 001425 

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/BCLTV, EB/ESC, DRL
COMMERCE FOR ITA JEAN KELLY
TREASURY FOR OASIA JEFF NEIL
USPACOM FOR FPA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/04/2013
TAGS: ETRD KTEX ELAB PHUM PGOV BM
SUBJECT: BURMA SANCTIONS: GARMENT MAKERS CLING TO LEAKY RAFT

REF: RANGOON 1358

Classified By: COM CARMEN MARTINEZ FOR REASONS 1.5 (B,D)

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 02 RANGOON 001425

SIPDIS

STATE FOR EAP/BCLTV, EB/ESC, DRL
COMMERCE FOR ITA JEAN KELLY
TREASURY FOR OASIA JEFF NEIL
USPACOM FOR FPA

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/04/2013
TAGS: ETRD KTEX ELAB PHUM PGOV BM
SUBJECT: BURMA SANCTIONS: GARMENT MAKERS CLING TO LEAKY RAFT

REF: RANGOON 1358

Classified By: COM CARMEN MARTINEZ FOR REASONS 1.5 (B,D)


1. (C) Summary: Burma's private garment manufacturers claim
100 closed factories and 50,000 jobless as of the end of
October -- with another 25,000 likely out of work by year's
end. However, last-minute, limited garment orders from
Europe will postpone the death of the Burmese garment
industry into 2004. As of yet, there's still no overwhelming
evidence of large numbers of garment workers turning economic
migrant or karaoke hostess. However we will wait until
severance packages and other opportunities dry up before
making a firm assessment of the social cost of the garment
sector's demise. End summary.

Burma's Garment Makers Emerge from Woodwork


2. (C) Citing increased attention from military intelligence,
Burmese owners of private garment factories have refused to
meet us since the implementation of the U.S. import ban in
late August. This import ban cut off the industry's primary
market for clothing -- worth around US$ 70 million to the
Burmese economy in 2002. However, we were able to sit down
on November 5th with a representative of one of the largest
private firms, a regular and reliable pre-sanctions contact
of the Embassy's, to hear the Burmese view of the state of
affairs in the garment sector. Several Korean investors in
the garment sector recently aired their grievances to us as
reported in reftel.


3. (C) The Burmese factory owner told us that an unexpected
20 percent rise in orders from Europe (due to the Euro 2004
soccer tournament),had softened the landing for his factory,
and those of his colleagues. Nonetheless, he had already
closed two of his seven factories, with a loss of 1,000 jobs,
and will close another this month -- 500 more jobs. Through
the end of October, the loosely organized Burmese garment
manufacturers' association reported 100 factories closed with
a loss of about 50,000 jobs. He commented that the damage
was almost done, predicting another 50 factories and 25,000

jobs lost in the next two months before capacity and demand
returned to equilibrium. He feared, though, that there would
be another round of closures in 2004, when the limited Euro
2004 orders dried up.

The Mystery of the Laid-Off Garment Worker


4. (C) Our contact agreed with his Korean colleagues'
assessment that few laid-off workers (nearly all young women)
had thus far sought refuge in the entertainment industry or
headed for the Thai border. Instead, he thought, most had
unsucessfully sought work in other stricken garment houses,
before heading back to the fields of their home villages.
However, he warned that it was really too early to make any
firm statements on the ultimate fate of these people. By
law, factory owners are required to give each laid-off
employee a three-month severance package. When these
packages start to dry up, in a month or two, the economic
situation for these unemployed, and their families, could
become dire. He would not speculate on the ultimate
destination for his ex-workers. He said that the
entertainment industry was "not for everybody," however, he
also asserted that employment opportunities for young women
are extremely limited.


5. (C) What is clear for now is that the government will
offer little assistance. Adopting the attitude it has relied
upon when faced by troubled traders and bankers, the Minister
of Industry (1) told a group of the largest local garment
factory owners that they should surivive "the best you can on
your own." When pressed, the Minister offered that
government factories might be able to temporarily hire 5-10
percent of the unemployed garment workers, but at a wage far
lower than in the private factories. (Government wages
across the board are pitiful, with a civil servant at the top
of the wage scale earning 10,000 kyat (about US$11 at current
rates) per month. Private garment factories usually offer
around the equivalent of US$15-$20 per month, or more, plus
overtime.)
Grim Future, But Details Aren't Clear

6. (C) From our observations and recent discussions with
garment manufacturers, NGOs, and other businesspeople
(including some potential hirers of ex-workers) we reach two
conclusions: (1) U.S. sanctions are expediting the death of
an already sickly garment sector and new orders from Europe,
or elsewhere, will not arrive to save the day; and, (2) it's
too early to make absolutly definitive assertions on the fate
of all of the 50,000-100,000 workers who have already lost,
or who will likely lose, their garment jobs. No one claims
that there are revolving doors between the garment factories
and the Thai border, or the restaurants, karaoke lounges,
massage parlors, and discos of Burma's cities. However, with
few other economic opportunities for young women available,
there remains a real fear that some of those who lose their
garment jobs will find their way into the country's
entertainment sector.
Martinez