The art of sewing has not fundamentally changed since the first seamstress put needle and thread to fabric thousands of years ago.
Even with great engineering advances including mechanised looms and sewing machines, the way garments are made is as labour intensive today as it was 100 years ago. Today’s consumers want inexpensive, high-quality goods delivered to their doorstep within days, pushing the limits of the traditional manufacturing business model to its breaking point.
Over the past years, manufacturers have used the best of ways to reduce overheads whether by the way of moving to low cost centres and paying the lowest wages, working in highly efficient systems or machines and also working on products that can fetch them higher fob’s and volumes. However, this business strategy is also becoming complacent because of rising labour costs. While earlier countries like China, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan were considered to be the ideal countries because of low cost labour availability, the scenario is changing fast and now buyers are moving to underdeveloped countries like Africa, Indonesia, Myanmar, Vietnam to get the sourcing done.
Latest Developments
With manufacturers in the developing finding difficult to retain skilled workers and also with millennials migrating to city centers and looking alternatives to factory jobs there is a big demand for skilled workers. The combination of this shortage of skilled labour with the market’s desire for lower costs and faster delivery is driving many brands to look to fully automated sewing lines.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 2017-Ausgabe von Perfect Sourcing.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 2017-Ausgabe von Perfect Sourcing.
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