Clean Clothes Campaign is dedicating this year’s International Labor Day to the hundreds of thousands of workers who produce garments for H&M. They are waiting for the brand to stop turning its back on the commitment that living wages would become a reality by 2018. Starting on May 1 and continuing throughout 2018, Clean Clothes Campaign (CCC) is placing the spotlight on H&M.
The brand’s public commitment to ensure workers receive living wages, and the associated roadmap, received a lot of positive media coverage in 2013, along with cheers from countless consumers who care about sustainable fashion.
However, the roadmap failed to state a living wage benchmark, among other issues. More than four years after H&M published the roadmap, hundreds of thousands of workers producing H&M’s garments are still not receiving living wages. Together with the International Labor Rights Forum and other international partners, Clean Clothes Campaign will be making sure throughout the year that consumers are aware of H&M’s 2013 living wage commitment, of the brand’s ability to fulfill it, and of the current practice: stocking shelves on the backs of workers who have to constantly worry about how they will feed their families, keep a roof over their head, send their children to school, pay for doctors' visits and cover other basic needs.

- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
Spykar accelerates offline expansion: plans 100 new stores across India
A titan of the Indian denim-first fashion scene, Spykar has officially unveiled an aggressive retail growth strategy. As consumer demand... Read more
The Inventory Illusion: Rethinking the Zara benchmark in a volatile retail era
For over a decade, the global fashion industry has treated the Zara playbook as the gold standard of inventory efficiency.... Read more
Retail Without Retail: How Walmart’s depot network is turning space into logisti…
Walmart is fundamentally rewriting the commercial real estate and retail logistics playbook with the rise of its ‘Walmart Depots’ a... Read more
Global textile regulation tightens, forcing realignment across fashion supply ch…
Global fashion and consumer goods supply chains are entering a decisive regulatory transition as Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) frameworks for... Read more
Luxury’s new power axis, US dominance, China reset, Gulf surge
As the post-China luxury order takes shape, the US is emerging as the industry’s most dependable growth engine, while Japan,... Read more
India’s $9 Billion Landfill Blind Spot How trashed clothes hold the key to globa…
A massive economic windfall is sitting uncollected in India’s landfills, and the key to unlocking it lies in rethinking how... Read more
Red Sea crisis reshapes textile trade routes, challenges India’s export margins,…
Global apparel trade is now in a new operational phase where geopolitical stability and logistics reliability are as important as... Read more
EU’s textile waste rules enter enforcement phase, raising alarms across fashion …
Europe’s apparel and textile industry is approaching one of its most significant regulatory transitions in decades. As the European Union... Read more
Corporate fashion adopts reverse logistics to unlock the $367 bn resale market
Global fashion retailers are rapidly changing their business models around resale, repair, and textile recovery as the secondhand apparel market... Read more
Tariff Shock 2026: Forced-labor enforcement is repricing global fashion trade
Washington’s latest trade intervention signals a break in the global apparel sourcing patterns. The Office of the United States Trade... Read more












