We north Americans seem
to have a thing about T-shirts. Most of
us have several, some of us have dozens.
And they aren’t just white undershirts—they make statements! Over time you can learn a lot about a guy
just by noticing what his T-shirts say.
But who would have
thought the actual life history of a T-shirt would be so interesting? I just finished reading a book that my son
gave me for Christmas: Travels of a T-Shirt in the Global Economy:
An Economist Examines the Markets, Power and Politics of the World Trade by
Pietra Rivoli. I loved this book. By examining in detail the story of the
humble cotton T-shirt, this book told me everything I didn’t know about the
global economy—and I really didn’t know much, it turns out. I learned about cotton seeds and ginning,
about slavery, about Texas cotton research, about price supports, about the global
race to produce the cheapest cotton shirts in the world, about world markets, and
about the incredibly, arcanely, highly regulated “free trade” import of
T-shirts into the U.S. from China, Burma, Nicaragua and just about anywhere. I learned that those imported T-shirts are
made from the same raw cotton that had been exported from the U.S. just months
before.
This book is about the
process of making money in the cotton industry, but it’s also about poverty. It’s about incredibly hard work for long
hours in underpaid sweatshops, but work that also provides a path off the rural
farms and out of desperate poverty for thousands upon thousands around the
world and over the centuries. To think
of the sweatshop as a gateway out of poverty was a mind-bender.
Travels
of a T-Shirt is not an economics tome, nor does it “preach”
about the evils of the T-shirt industry.
It just tries to tell the story and let the reader draw his or her own
conclusions about global trade. It will
inform, and it will make you think. It
is eminently readable. If you want to
learn a lot about globalization and its effect on poverty, read Travels of a T-Shirt.