J. Mazur, REMEDIES TO THE PROBLEM OF CHILD LABOR - THE SITUATION IN THE APPARELINDUSTRY, American journal of industrial medicine, 24(3), 1993, pp. 331-334
When you realize how long the problem of child labor has been around,
anyone who ventures into the terrain of remedies obviously needs a lon
g memory and not a little optimism. What have we tried? What has worke
d? And what has not worked? To answer these questions, we must first l
ook at how we have diagnosed the problem. Some say that the return of
child labor is due to the present recession. Hard-pressed businesses a
re looking for cheap and cheaper labor. Sweatshops proliferate. When t
he recession recedes, so will child labor. If it were that simple, we
could all congratulate ourselves on having conducted this enlightened
symposium and go home without worrying much more about the problem. Th
e magic hand of the market, in due course, will straighten it all-out.
Let me tell you something about the apparel industry in New York wher
e new laws and strict enforcement make the only difference. Over 80% o
f OSHA inspections were triggered by the state's Apparel Task Force.