I. Overview
A 1992 report by UNICEF revealed that over one million Guatemalan children
aged seven and up are working.1 Despite a
reported decline in employment of children under the age of 14 in Guatemala's
garment maquiladoras that produce apparel for export to the United States,
evidence suggests that a small amount of children are still employed. Remote
factories and subcontracted garment manufacturing enterprises appear to be more
likely than urban factories to employ children. Further investigation of these
areas is needed.
II. Child Labor in Export Industries
Garment Maquilas
In 1993, Guatemala exported over $545 million in apparel to the United
States.2 The vast majority of garments exported
from Guatemala are produced in maquiladoras, or "maquilas," which
assemble garments from imported materials and ship them to foreign destinations
without being subjected to any duties.3 A large
percentage of Guatemala's maquilas are owned by U.S. or South Korean investors
and employ a largely female work force.4
In recent years, a great deal of attention has been focused on child labor
in Guatemala's maquiladora sector. Kurt Peterson, who researched and wrote on
Guatemala's maquiladoras in 1992, has described the working conditions of
children employed in these factories. Peterson profiled one child worker named
Maria as follows:
Only thirteen years old, "Maria" works at Sung Sil S.A., a
five-hundred-machine shop . . . [which] is located in a recently constructed
maquila factory park ten miles outside of Guatemala City. Maria lives with her
two brothers, her parents, and her grandmother in a two-room shack on a dirt
road near the modern factory. She does not attend school and cannot read. But
Maria can sew -- for eleven hours a day, six days a week she sews. When
management requires, she works until 3:00 a.m., and then rises four hours later
to begin again.5
Many observers, including Guatemalan NGOs and U.S. Embassy officials, assert
that, as a result of the negative publicity given to child labor in the textile
maquilas, employers have greatly reduced their use of child labor.6
A recent study by the Guatemalan think-tank Asociacion para el Avance de las
Ciencias Sociales en Guatemala (AVANCSO) found that nine of forty-nine maquila
workers were between the ages of 14 and 17 and that this group represented the
youngest group of workers.7 Nevertheless, there
is evidence suggesting that at least some children under the age of 14 are still
working in the textile factories.
A Guatemalan woman who had conducted extensive interviews with workers in
garment maquiladoras that were producing for export to the United States
testified at a June 1994 U.S. House Subcommittee on Labor-Management Relations
Hearing that, "(t)here are many children as young as 11 or 12 working in
maquilas."8 Kenneth Klothen, a children's
rights expert who visited Guatemala in May 1994, reported that although there
has been a decrease in child labor in Guatemala's export industries, there is
still reason for concern. Klothen claims that, "those maquiladoras located
outside the capital city may be more likely to employ younger children both
because the pool of adult workers is smaller and because they are less likely to
be exposed to scrutiny by independent observers."9
He supports this argument with evidence given by AVANCSO investigators who
recently observed children as young as 12 entering a maquila in Chimaltenango,
several miles from Guatemala City, but were denied access to the factory by
management.10 Other sources, including Peterson,
echoed Klothen's argument by claiming that more child labor exists in the remote
maquilas than in those found in the cities.11
Klothen also noted the continuing trend to subcontract garment sewing in
small shops and homes in Guatemala. This practice, which is commonly found in
Latin America, allows a factory to boost its production while turning a blind
eye to child workers who are employed by these sub-contractors or who assist
their mothers working out of their homes. An example of this sort of
arrangement is given by Peterson, "in the village of San Pedro
Sacatepequez, where [a U.S. owned garment company] contracts large volumes of
cheap flannel shirts to dozens of small household shops, children as young as
six work alongside their siblings and mothers, usually snipping excess threads
from finished garments."12 Although there
has been no recent written documentation of child labor in this area, sources in
Guatemala have continued to report its existence.13
Further investigation is needed to determine the extent to which children
under 14 are working in the maquila factories, or involved in the
subcontracting, of Guatemala's garment industry today.
Other Export Industries
Labor Ministry and staff from non-governmental organizations working with
indigenous children allege that child labor violations also exist in the
agricultural processing sector that ships both fresh and frozen products to
foreign markets.14
III. Laws of Guatemala
A. National Child Labor Laws
The basic minimum age for work in Guatemala, as established in the Codigo de
Trabajo, is 14. However, the Inspector General of Labor (IGT) has authority to
grant a work permit to an underage child if that child is an apprentice, "extreme
poverty" warrants the child's contribution to the family income, or if he
or she is engaged in work that is light in "duration and intensity."15 Children under 16 are prohibited from engaging
in "unhealthy or dangerous" work, as established by regulation or upon
inspection by the IGT.16 All minors are
prohibited from engaging in night work.17
The Guatemalan labor code's provisions concerning the work of children under
14 have not effectively limited the number of children working. The United
States Department of State reports that 5,000 children have the authorization to
work but thousands more children are working without permits.18
The Ministry of Labor's inspection system for enforcing child labor laws is
widely viewed as inadequate.19 The shortcomings
are largely due to the shortage of labor inspectors and the structural
weaknesses in the labor court system.20 Courts
are backlogged and understaffed and defendants may select the judge they will
appear before. Moreover, maquila owners frequently deny entrance to labor
inspectors. The United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
currently has a program in Guatemala to assist with the hiring and training of
labor inspectors with the aim of doubling the existing number of labor
inspectors, increasing their salaries, establishing regional inspectorates, and
providing technical training.21
B. Education Laws
Education is compulsory in Guatemala until age 14.22
Article 74 of the Guatemalan Constitution provides that:
Citizens have the right and obligation to receive initial education,
pre-school, primary and basic education, within the age limits established by
the law. The education is free. The State shall provide for and promote
scholarships and educational credits.23
In practice, this law is not enforced. The overall national illiteracy rate
is 52 percent with the rate as high as 85 percent in rural areas.24
A 1989 SODIFAG study found a 90 percent illiteracy rate among indigenous
children.25
C. International Conventions
The Government of Guatemala is party to the UN Convention on the Rights of
the Child.26 Guatemala has also ratified ILO
Convention No. 138 Concerning Minimum Age for Admission to Employment and
Convention No. 59 Concerning Minimum Age for Admission to Employment in
Industry.27
IV. Programs and Efforts To Address Child Labor
The administration of President Ramon de Leon Carpio has attempted, since it
came into power in 1993, to improve the work of the Ministry of Labor. The
number of inspectors has been increased and there has been substantial
decentralization in the ministry. The Labor Ministry has also created a Task
Force for Protection of Child Workers which has jurisdiction over the issuance
of authorizations for work by minors, distributes materials on workers rights to
child workers and provides them with alternative Sunday school programs, as well
coordinating the visits of counsellors with young workers. The Labor Ministry
is also currently translating child worker rights materials into indigenous
languages for wider distribution.28
A number of Guatemalan NGOs are involved in advocacy work, research, and
social programs designed to address the problems of child labor. Many of these
programs deal exclusively with street children and the extreme conditions under
which they work and live.
1 Cited in "Children Bear Brunt of
Guatemalan Civil Strife,"
Notimex Mexican News Service, June 8, 1992.
2 U.S. Department of Commerce, International
Trade Administration, Office of Textiles and Apparel, Major Shippers:
Textiles and Apparel (June 11, 1994).
3 Kenneth L. Klothen, Child Labor in the
Export Manufacturing Sectors of Central America and Mexico (May, 1994) 5 [on
file] [hereinafter Klothen].
4 Cindy Forster, "Organizing in the
Maquila Factories," in Report on Guatemala (Spring 1991) 6.
5 Kurt Peterson, The Maquiladora Revolution
in Guatemala (New Haven: The Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International
Human Rights at Yale Law School, 1992) 170 [hereinafter The Maquiladora
Revolution].
6 Klothen at 7.
7 El Significado de la Maquila en Guatemala
(Guatemala City: AVANCSO, 1994).
8 Hearing on Leslie Fay Closure in the
United States, U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on
Labor-Management Relations (June 7, 1994) (Statement of Flor de Maria Salguero
de Laparro).
9 Klothen at 7.
10 Id. at 7.
11 Telephone interview with Kurt Peterson,
author of The Maquiladora Revolution in Guatemala, by U.S. Department of
Labor official (April 14, 1994).
12 The Maquiladora Revolution at 92.
13 Minutes of Briefing by Rosa Delia Galicia
Lopez of INEXPORT Union to the Guatemala Coordinating Committee (November 11,
1992).
14 Klothen at 8.
15 Codigo de Trabajo, Article 150.
16 Id. at Art. 148.
17 Id. at Art. 148 and 149.
18 Country Reports on Human Rights
Practices for 1993 (U.S. Department of State, February 1994) 459
[hereinafter Country Reports].
19 Klothen at 8.
20 Country Reports at 459
21 Klothen at 8.
22 Conditions of Work Digest, Volume 10
(Geneva: International Labor Organization, 1991) 36.
23 The Guatemalan Human Rights Commission, "Children
and the Right to Education," Monograph No. 10 (November 1987) 2.
24 Country Reports at 459.
25 Cited in Generalized System of
Preferences (GSP) Subcommittee: 1990 GSP Annual Review, Cases"
006,010-CP-90, Guatemala (GSP Information Center, Office of the United
States Trade Representative, August 1990) 15.
26 Country Reports at 1403.
27 List of Ratifications by Convention by
Country (as at December 1992) (Geneva: International Labor Organization,
1993).
28 Klothen at 9.