Haiti

Haiti, garment workers, worker rights, Solidarity Center

In Haiti’s export apparel industry, the Solidarity Center joins with unions to educate workers about their rights under national and international labor laws. Credit: Olton Dorvelus

 

Haiti faces overlapping economic, political, and humanitarian crises, including severe political instability, gang violence, natural disasters, food insecurity and forced migration. Workers experience the collapse of government in their daily interactions with the institutions charged with enforcing labor rights or providing social services.

Gang violence and fuel shortages prevent workers from getting to work and hamper the delivery of materials to factories. After paying a significant portion of their wages for transportation, and enduring a dangerous journey, some workers are sent home without pay because the factory did not receive the materials needed for production.

In this context, garment workers struggle to make ends meet. The minimum wage in the garment sector is 685 gourdes ($5.36) per day. Solidarity Center studies repeatedly have demonstrated the daily minimum wage is far less than the estimated cost of living in Haiti. While the garment sector remains Haiti’s largest source of formal employment, significant job losses have left most garment workers facing diminished working hours or layoffs, threatening their ability to provide for their families. The reduction of full-time jobs also has reduced union membership, thereby threatening the ability of unions to negotiate better working conditions. Notably, there is only one collective bargaining agreement in the sector.

Despite the recent contraction of the garment sector, it remains one of  Haiti’s fundamental pillars of economic growth and formal employment. With greater capacity to hold employers and government accountable to respect labor rights in the garment industry, garment sector unions contribute to creating a culture of accountability, justice, and the rule of law— critical elements for fostering democracy and enhancing the culture of peaceful conflict resolution in a country riddled with political fragmentation and violence

Media Contact

Vanessa Parra
Campaign and Media Communications Director

(+1) 202-974 -8383

 

Haiti: Unions Play Important Role in Restoring $1 Million to Garment Workers

Solidarity Center
Solidarity Center
Haiti: Unions Play Important Role in Restoring $1 Million to Garment Workers
Loading
/

[Fibre2Fashion] Haiti should raise garment workers’ living wage: Solidarity Center

Haiti garment workers should be paid four times their current salaries just to keep pace with the cost of living, a new Solidarity Center study has found.

Haiti Garment Workers Need Four Times Their Wages to Get By

Solidarity Center
Solidarity Center
Haiti Garment Workers Need Four Times Their Wages to Get By
Loading
/
Haiti: Workers Demonstrating For Higher Wages Met with Police Violence

Haiti: Workers Demonstrating For Higher Wages Met with Police Violence

Violence broke out on Wednesday, February 23, as Haitian police opened fire on garment workers demonstrating for higher wages and killed a reporter, according to witness reports. Two other reporters were injured at the scene in Port-au-Prince. Maxihen Lazzare, who...

Haiti: Workers Demonstrating For Higher Wages Met with Police Violence

Haiti: Factory Workers Stage Peaceful Rally to Demand Higher Wages

Following Haitian unions’ open letter to the prime minister demanding an increase in the minimum wage, factory workers in the nation’s capital staged a peaceful protest outside the SONAPI industrial park in Port-au-Prince on February 9 and 10.  Videos and photos...

Haiti: Workers Demonstrating For Higher Wages Met with Police Violence

Haitian Unions Demand Minimum Wage Increase

Haiti remains in the midst of multiple crises as the country grapples with the question of who will lead the nation in the aftermath of the assassination of President Jovenel Moise. Most recently, the dramatic rise in the cost of living has led workers to demand an...

Pin It on Pinterest