To think that some of you English are shocked to find that young people are working in garment factories is ludicrous.
Here's to all the older people who are working for three dollars a day. To think that a £2 T shirt could be made by £5.50 an hour paid people. You are shocked? You have never been on holiday to the third world where you know how cheap things are? Come off it! To say nothing of the material, the machining, the packing, the transport from thousands of miles away.
But hey- that's what the much more expensive "designers" are paying to get their clothes made in the third world- why else are they there- because they love the countries so much? They just mark up their clothes so much no one in their right minds would think that an £120 T shirt could be made for 80 cents, but it is.
You have obviously never been to the back streets of Hong Kong to the short term lease places selling factory over-runs, to the factory gates in Java, where Reeboks are £4. Or to the seedier streets of Blok M in Jakarta where Planet Hollywood denim shirts destined for Aspen, New York or Houston could be had for £3. ( And that's genuine- the fakes are £1.)
The minimum mark up on clothes seems to be 600%, so the £3 T shirt is how much? Get a calculator boys and girls. (It's 60 cents).
If it costs the same to make a T shirt for Primark as it does for BHS, TopShop, M&S, then why is there such a discrepancy in retail cost? Who gets the money? The people on the shop floor? Don't think so.
Who is the dishonest person here? OK it's bad for children to be employed- they should be in school- but in their holidays- to help their desparately poor parents- what should they do? They are bringing in much needed funds for their lives, and the industry pays them a pittance - but that's the agreement. The fact that people in the rag trade in London then make millions out of it- is whose fault?
This is a difficult position, and every shop is guilty of it to some degree.