National Consumers League (NCL), a consumer and worker advocacy group, said that it is launching the social media campaign that enables consumers to inform retailers that they would be willing to pay 10 cents more for every garment purchased which will go towards improving worker safety in Bangladesh.
The NCL says, its '10 cent' campaign is based on scientific calculations.
According to a Worker Rights Consortium calculation, rebuilding Bangladesh's unsafe factories and installing appropriate safety equipment would cost USD 3 billion, or a USD 600 million investment every year for five years.
Bangladesh is the world's second-largest apparel exporter of western brands.
"American companies like Walmart, JC Penney, and Gap, who depend on factories that employ low-paid workers in dangerous environments think consumers would not be willing to pay 10 cents more for clothing," said Sally Greenberg, NCL executive director.
"It's time consumers prove them wrong, and let their collective voice be heard. By taking this pledge on Facebook, consumers can exercise their enormous power to influence retailers," she said.
"American companies, however, have been slow to act," NCL said.
Till May 15, only two US-based companies (PVH and Abercrombie and Fitch) have signed the accord, it added.
