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A bill
introduced this week by Senators Robert Kerrey (D-NE) and Charles E. Grassley
(R-IA) to combat the use of child labor in countries exporting to the United
States is unlikely to have any positive effect on children, concludes the
International Labor Rights Fund, a leading child labor advocate in Washington,
DC.
The
"International Child Welfare Protection Act" is intended to provide a "positive
incentive" for countries to take action against child labor by extending
additional trade access to the U.S. market if they ratify ILO Convention
138, which sets a minimum age for employment at the age of completion for
compulsory schooling or 14 or 15 years. However, several problems lie in
the way of this strategy:
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U.S. law
already provides special trade access under the Generalized System of Preferences
to countries that are "taking steps" to enforce internationally-recognized
workers rights, including a minimum age for the employment of children.
This bill adds no new incentive.
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Many countries
with serious child labor problems already have laws on the books making
it illegal to employ children in industry under the age of 14, but without
serious enforcement. Another law or ratified convention will not by itself
decrease the plight of these victimized children.
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The U.S.
itself has not ratified ILO Convention 138, which makes it difficult
for other countries to take seriously our use of this Convention as a condition
for our trade with them.
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The trade
benefits offered under the Generalized System of Preferences (tariff-free
access) are declining in value with each year, as the effects of the Uruguay
Round of the GATT are implemented.
While we
strongly support the intent of this bill, to end the global nightmare of
abusive child labor, we believe that stronger incentives and disincentives
are necessary to bring about change for the more than 250 million children
who toil everyday in the mines, quarries, loomsheds, plantations and factories
of the world.
As part
of that effort, we call on Senators Kerrey and Grassley to lead an effort
to amend U.S. law to better protect children from unduly premature and
hazardous work on our nation's farms, and to ratify ILO Convention 138
to put the United States in the forefront in support of international standards.
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