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Global value chains for medical gloves during the COVID-19 pandemic: Confronting forced labour through public procurement and crisis
Authors:Alex Hughes  James A. Brown  Mei Trueba  Alexander Trautrims  Ben Bostock  Emily Day  Rosey Hurst  Mahmood F Bhutta
Affiliation:1. School of Geography, Politics and Sociology, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK;2. Brighton and Sussex Medical School, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK;3. Jubilee Campus, Nottingham University Business School, Nottingham, UK;4. Impactt Limited, London, UK
Abstract:This paper evaluates ways in which labour issues in global value chains for medical gloves have been affected by, and addressed through, the COVID-19 pandemic. It focuses on production in Malaysia and supply to the United Kingdom's National Health Service and draws on a large-scale survey with workers and interviews with UK government officials, suppliers and buyers. Adopting a Global Value Chain (GVC) framework, the paper shows how forced labour endemic in the sector was exacerbated during the pandemic in the context of increased demand for gloves. Attempts at remediation are shown to operate through both a reconfigured value chain in which power shifted dramatically to the manufacturers and a context where public procurement became higher in profile than ever before. It is argued that the purchasing power of governments must be leveraged in ways that more meaningfully address labour issues, and that this must be part of value chain resilience.
Keywords:COVID-19  forced labour  global value chains  public procurement
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