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Why Some Victims of Modern Slavery Are “Underworked”

  • Published on
    July 17, 2018
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  • Category:
    Debt Bondage, Forced Labor, Human Trafficking
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It may not be intuitive, but researchers at the University of Bath have found that some victims of modern slavery may actually be “underworked.”

Why? Because it can increase or prolong a victim’s debt bondage and provide a steady stream of revenue for employers who require workers to pay for living costs.

Related Campaign: Urge Australia to pass a strong Modern Slavery Act. 

Researchers at the Academy of Management at the University of Bath’s School of Management say that their study of the food and construction sectors in the UK revealed that exploited workers are not necessarily being worked as hard as they can. Victims are sometimes given no work or work for only a few hours each week.

The report’s authors point out that the assumption that all victims of modern slavery tirelessly overworked does not ring true for every exploited worker.

EurekAlert reports:

Gangmasters take on more workers than they need and deliberately avoid giving victims work. They provide them with accommodation and money for food, on the proviso it is paid back when they start earning; cultivating dependence and debt bondage, most common among migrant workers in the agricultural sector.

Victims become ‘coerced consumers’, forced into spend wages on accommodation, food, transport and other goods provided by their employer. They are driven deeper into debt, securing funds from family members abroad, or instant loan services.

In other cases, workers will accumulate large amounts of debt, usually with undisclosed premium interest rates, that they cannot repay. They are pushed further into financial dependence and become increasingly susceptible to continued exploitation.

Professor Andrew Crane, from the University of Bath’s Centre for Business, Organisations and Society, said, “At first, the idea of the victims of modern slavery being ‘underworked’ perplexed us. Why would you coerce workers into a situation of forced labour if you were not going to work them as hard as you could?”

“The explanation is that victims are being mercilessly forced into a cycle of debt and exploitation that is extremely difficult to break.”

Professor Crane hopes that the new research will shine a light on how “innovative” businesses attempt to get away with labor exploitation.

“We think of business innovation as being to the benefit of the environment and society but here is the dark side of business innovation, highlighting the warped business logic of those who profit from exploitation.”

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Freedom United
Admin
6 years ago
Reply to  john Tuvo

Hi John,
All comments on Freedom United must be approved before they are posted to the page to ensure that the comment facility is not abused, for example with adverts or spam.

Rogers
Rogers
6 years ago
Reply to  Tim

This is why I raise as much of my food as possible and live as much off the grid as possible to prevent exploitation of others as much s I can.

Tim
Tim
6 years ago
Reply to  john Tuvo

Coming back to the start of this discussion – treatment of migrant workers.
The idiocy of Brexit will make this even worse as more will be classed as “illegals” and thus will have even less chance of justice in the workplace. I remember a Cornish farmer saying after June 2016 – “how do you expect us to run our farms and harvest our produce without the help of legal temporary employees?”
The majority of people have no idea where their food comes from and have no idea of the true cost.

john Tuvo
6 years ago
Reply to  Tim

Sincere and well intioned ideas from all, but the thing is organize ourselves, the productive people, those who make their living providing the necessities of life. This is not be “bolshie”
The bolsheviks were right about the need for worker’s democracy, but violated their own principles because they tried to lead us without being one of us. For the next great movement to be successful it must follow the principles of having no professional organizers in the lead; instead workers must lead.

john Tuvo
6 years ago

In class society, exploitation has always been the case, but because workers have not YET written history, we do not know precisely when classes started. When Shamanism started, when one group preached for a living and the hunters gathered the food, that was CLASS. Capitalists have more of a need for advanced production, thus our lives advanced a bit. A butcher could support a family in the Bay Area. Now, it’s impossible. We need our own thing–Bolshies were led by an elite–not workers.

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