Lawmaker presses luxury designer after reports of exploiting Indigenous workers
A Loro Piana store in Manhattan on Sept. 17, 2021. A sweater made from vicuña wool can sell for more than $5,000. (Jeenah Moon/The New York Times)
by Robert Jimison
WASHINGTON, DC.- A $9,000 designer sweater made out of the ultrarare fur of a South American animal called a vicuna is not exactly a typical area of focus for a member of Congress.
But when Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif., a first-term Democrat and the first Peruvian-born person to serve in the House, saw reports that luxury design house Loro Piana was not fairly compensating Indigenous workers in Peru who source the rare wool in some of its priciest knit clothing, he decided to use his position to make some noise.
As the first Peruvian American member of Congress and co-chair of the Congressional Peru Caucus, I write regarding concerning reports about the sourcing of vicuna wool by Loro Piana, a subsidiary of LVMH Moët Hennessy Louis Vuitton, he wrote to company executives last month.
He demanded that the fashion house whose products including shirts, scarves and coats can cost $500 to $30,000 explain how it could raise its prices so steeply while steadily reducing the amount it was paying the people who harvest the raw materials for it.
While Loro Pianas prices have increased, the price per kilo for fibers paid to the Lucanas community has fallen by one-third in just over a decade; and the villages revenue from the vicuna has fallen 80%, Garcia wrote.
More:
https://artdaily.cc/index.asp?int_new=168382&int_sec=11
Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif.
(He's also former Mayor of Long Beach)
Vicuñas: You looking at us?