|
A - I n f o s
|
|
a multi-lingual news service by, for, and about anarchists
**
News in all languages
Last 40 posts (Homepage)
Last two
weeks' posts
Our
archives of old posts
The last 100 posts, according
to language
Greek_
中文 Chinese_
Castellano_
Catalan_
Deutsch_
Nederlands_
English_
Français_
Italiano_
Polski_
Português_
Russkyi_
Suomi_
Svenska_
Türkçe_
_The.Supplement
The First Few Lines of The Last 10 posts in:
Castellano_
Deutsch_
Nederlands_
English_
Français_
Italiano_
Polski_
Português_
Russkyi_
Suomi_
Svenska_
Türkçe_
First few lines of all posts of last 24 hours |
of past 30 days |
of 2002 |
of 2003 |
of 2004 |
of 2005 |
of 2006 |
of 2007 |
of 2008 |
of 2009 |
of 2010 |
of 2011 |
of 2012 |
of 2013 |
of 2014 |
of 2015 |
of 2016 |
of 2017 |
of 2018 |
of 2019 |
of 2020 |
of 2021 |
of 2022 |
of 2023 |
of 2024 |
of 2025 |
of 2026
Syndication Of A-Infos - including
RDF - How to Syndicate A-Infos
Subscribe to the a-infos newsgroups
(en) France, Monde Libertaire - That's all Shein... (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
Date
Sun, 31 May 2026 07:22:18 +0300
Overconsumption, planned obsolescence, resource depletion, pollution,
disregard for human rights ---- The essential information in this
article is taken from the ActionAid France report based on an
investigation conducted in April 2025 jointly with the NGO China Labor
Watch, that is, before Shein's recent troubles with French and European
authorities; this text does not attempt to elaborate on the content of
this 21-page report, which can be consulted on their website. This is a
summary. ---- A worker sorts a pile of clothes on the floor. The Shein
logo can be seen on some of them. © China Labor Watch ---- Exposing
Shein's practices is crucial in the fight against globalized capitalism,
in order to reveal that it is about more than simply regulating the sale
of immodest goods or reducing regulations to a mere instrument of
national, or even European, trade defense. Regulating Shein's practices
is fundamental, as this company is the most prominent representative of
globalized capitalism based on overconsumption and the depletion of
natural resources. It is responsible for 26.2 million tons of CO2,
exacerbating climate change, while operating with disregard for human
rights. Fast fashion is responsible for 4% of global climate emissions.
Moreover, Shein didn't invent the concept; it simply promoted it.
Shein exports 5,000 tons of clothing by plane every day.
Emerging in the 1990s, fast fashion refers to this acceleration of
fashion, designed to sell ever more. It has benefited from the
development of e-commerce, which facilitates rapid online sales. Shein's
global success has given it a new boost: ultra-fast fashion, which
accounts for 72% of the increase in sales between 2023 and 2024 (an
additional 100 million units).
Shein operates in 150 countries, with the exception of China, where it
does not ship.
With an estimated revenue of $38 billion in 2024, Shein is one of the
largest retailers in the sector. It benefits from hundreds of millions
of orders, an unprecedented volume in the history of the textile industry.
Shein exports 5,000 tons of clothing by air every day, the equivalent of
22 million t-shirts. This would be enough to clothe the entire
population of France in three days. The company emitted 26.2 million
tons of CO2, a 23.1% increase compared to 2023.
An average of 7,000 new items are added to the brand's website every
day, with peaks reaching up to 50,000 new additions.
In 2024, Shein became the brand "where the French spend the most".
In our country, the brand's turnover was estimated at 1.64 billion euros
in 2023. According to a study conducted by the shopping application
Joko, based on the anonymized banking data of 700,000 people, Shein
became in 2024 the brand "where the French spend the most", with a 58%
increase in its sales (which mainly concern those under thirty).
That same year, nearly a quarter of the parcels handled by the French
postal service, La Poste, came from sales by Shein and Temu, the other
major Chinese online sales platform. This has led to insurmountable
problems, as the brand has the means to circumvent European regulatory
attempts. It now lands cargo ships in Belgium and transports parcels by
truck, thus increasing its carbon footprint. Furthermore, with the help
of a European country, it has developed a gigantic warehouse in Poland
(originally intended to temporarily store returned products until they
were put back into circulation). This was done to avoid the EUR3 tax per
parcel that the EU wanted to impose by eliminating the customs duty
exemption granted to so-called "low-value" shipments, particularly
within the European market, where the threshold is set at less than EUR150.
Providing a framework and regulations for the entire sector to prevent
the emergence of other equally harmful and polluting models.
Regulating Shein's practices is not only essential, and, as we have
clearly seen with the uncovering of sales of "illegal" products, whether
"sex dolls", including those with pedopornographic implications or
weapons of all kinds, it is fundamental, since this model has
deleterious consequences at the environmental and societal level,
because it plunders natural resources and acts on climate change and
global warming, while operating in contempt of human rights.
The aim is not to focus (or even try to focus) solely on the Chinese
brand, which would prove impossible for numerous reasons, particularly
legal and extraterritorial ones, as we saw with the French government's
bluster that went nowhere. Rather, the goal is to provide a framework
for the entire sector to prevent the emergence of other equally
polluting models and to allow for the development of "sustainable
fashion," even if, for the moment, this seems unlikely without a
fundamental societal upheaval.
Shein owes its success to the constant renewal of its product offerings.
Offering low-quality products with a limited lifespan, a free return
policy that encourages overconsumption, and using artificial
intelligence to generate a constant stream of new designs, Shein and its
competitor Temu, endorsed by millions of consumers worldwide, have
become, like the GAFAM companies, indispensable in globalized capitalist
society.
Shein owes its success to a constant renewal of its offerings, based on
"emotional obsolescence": this involves pushing consumers to no longer
desire the clothes they bought the day before by constantly presenting
them with new items, which is the foundation of the 21st-century
hyper-consumer society.
Thanks to artificial intelligence tools, the offerings are therefore
constantly adapted to consumers' "preferences." Depending on demand,
production can be increased or halted almost instantly, as Shein orders
clothing, fashion accessories, and home linens on a just-in-time basis
from a myriad of small workshops. These workshops produce very small
quantities of each item, with the stock being replenished daily at
ridiculously low prices, thanks to the exploitation of an invisible
workforce.
Poverty, urban segregation, and social and economic inequalities are
rampant.
An investigation was conducted, among others, by a representative of the
NGO China Labor Watch based in Kangle, over a period of more than two
years, to build trust with the workers and document their daily lives.
At the heart of Shein's ultra-fast fashion empire lie the urban villages
of Guangzhou, home to an underpaid and exploited migrant workforce.
Poverty, urban segregation, and social and economic inequalities are the
main characteristics of these "villages." They pose safety risks due to
their extreme density; the urban fabric is composed of buildings crammed
together, failing to meet safety standards, and consisting of unsanitary
housing where living and working spaces are indistinguishable. They
offer temporary and precarious shelter to workers in a city marked by
social and economic inequalities. Some apartments are converted into
clandestine textile workshops, unsanitary dwellings where living and
working spaces are not separated, and where machines run day and night.
Coming from the rural regions of Hubei, Jiangxi, or Fujian, without city
residence permits (the infamous "hukou"), these people, sometimes
minors, are excluded from the most basic social protections, forming a
reserve of disposable labor, trapped in poverty, and readily mobilized
to absorb production peaks. then disappear when demand falls.
An 11-hour workday, 6 to 7 days a week, for an average price of EUR0.50
per item.
The urban village of Kangle (a district of Guangzhou) concentrates over
100,000 inhabitants in barely one square kilometer. Kangle is essential
to fast-fashion brands; its dense network of hundreds of small
workshops, subcontracting for subcontractors, allows for the production
of clothing at an uninterrupted pace, chaining cutting, sewing,
packaging, and shipping in just a few days.
On the street and in recruitment markets, workers wait outside the
workshops, sometimes holding a sign indicating their availability.
It is not uncommon for a workday to last more than 10 hours, sometimes
12 hours, or even longer depending on the time of year. The workers
interviewed reported being paid per item, depending on the complexity of
the task, for amounts ranging from EUR0.06 to EUR0.27.
To earn a "good wage," one must work a minimum of 11 hours a day, 6 to 7
days a week, at an average price of EUR0.50 per item; a worker would
have to produce nearly 300 items per day to hope to reach 4,229 yuan (or
EUR502), the average monthly cost of living.
Added to this is the significant instability of income, linked to
fluctuations in demand. During peak sales periods, such as Black Friday
or Christmas, orders flood in, working hours lengthen, and the days
become more intense; then demand decreases, wages plummet, and workers,
most of whom are without contracts, can find themselves unemployed
overnight.
In short, Shein's ability to offer up to 50,000 new items per day at
rock-bottom prices relies on the systematic exploitation of an invisible
workforce. Decentralized, unregulated, and ultra-flexible: Shein's
production chain is designed to allow the brand to evade all
responsibility. But behind the "shock prices" lie millions of invisible
hours of labor, worn-out bodies, and violated rights.
Unsustainable work rates, piece-rate wages, and unrealistic
profitability targets: these conditions are not exceptions in the
informal workshops that supply Shein, but the norm. Fast fashion thrives
not despite human rights violations, but because of them.
Women on the front lines:
Women are systematically at the bottom of the ladder. Although they make
up the majority of production lines, they are relegated to the most
precarious and lowest-paid positions, while men retain privileged access
to the most desirable roles.
The practice of unpaid labor for women has become widespread, as
reported by several individuals. Recruitment by couples, where the
woman's work is not independently compensated, appears to be the
preferred method. In China, as elsewhere, gender norms continue to
assign primary responsibility for children to mothers. Some mothers have
no other option than to take their young children with them to the
workshops, exposing them to social isolation and physical risks, like
all workers, due to the lack of personal protective equipment, such as
gloves or masks, in environments where synthetic microparticles are
ubiquitous. This has repercussions for their health, as no medical
follow-up is provided.
Other mothers have made a different choice, entrusting their children to
family members living in the countryside where they are from, far from
urban villages and distant from supply chains.<sup>1</sup>
Furthermore, female workers reported experiencing sexist and sexual
violence in the workshops, particularly verbal abuse.
Cotton, Xinjiang, Uyghurs, forced labor:
The Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region is the main territory inhabited by
the Uyghur population. It plays a central role in the Chinese textile
economy, supplying more than 80% of the country's cotton production and
20% of global production. Forced labor, mass internment, and widespread
surveillance are established practices there.
According to the NGO End Uyghur Forced Labour, one in five cotton
garments worldwide is linked to the forced labor of Uyghurs.
Shein maintains partnerships with several industrial and logistics
parks, notably the Guangqing Textile Park, and could gradually integrate
Xinjiang cotton into all of its Guangdong workshops, accelerating its
integration into globalized value chains.
According to research commissioned by Stop Uyghur Genocide, it is highly
likely that the park received investment and financial support from the
brand. In May 2024, four companies from Xinjiang, some of which are
sanctioned by US authorities under the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention
Act (UFLPA) due to their alleged links to forced labor, signed an
agreement to establish themselves in the Guangzhou North Zhongda Fashion
Technology City. There is a tangible risk that cotton products from the
region have entered Shein's supply chain.
"ActionAid France advocates for strengthening the European directive on
due diligence, not weakening it in the name of 'business
competitiveness,' and for the adoption of a law that regulates the
entire fashion industry by imposing compliance with international labor
standards."
This conclusion from ActionAid France-regulation in the textile sector,
and in particular a European directive-is only a bare minimum demand.
A fundamental change is needed, through joint action: citizens putting
pressure on institutions, economic actors, and, above all, in short, a
societal shift!
Berny F.
1. This is one of the themes of the magnificent *The Time of Harvests*.
https://www.avoir-alire.com/le-temps-des-moissons-huo-meng-critique
https://monde-libertaire.net/?articlen=8950
_________________________________________
A - I N F O S N E W S S E R V I C E
By, For, and About Anarchists
Send news reports to A-infos-en mailing list
A-infos-en@ainfos.ca
Subscribe/Unsubscribe https://ainfos.ca/mailman/listinfo/a-infos-en
Archive: http://ainfos.ca/en
- Prev by Date:
(en) France, UCL AL #370 - Iran-Israel: From Understanding to Annihilation (ca, de, fr, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
- Next by Date:
(en) Spaine, Aragon, AM: Ours has always been resistance. (ca, de, it, pt, tr)[machine translation]
A-Infos Information Center