Post by account_disabled on Feb 25, 2024 3:19:54 GMT
This day Fashion Revolution México and Arlenica presented the results of the Second Fashion Transparency Index in Mexico 2021 , which revealed a global average score of 6% and established that the six highest scores were obtained by the brands: C&A with 58%, Levi ´s Strauss de México 46%, Zara 38%, Ilusión 15%, Liverpool and El Palacio de Hierro 9% and Flexi with 6%. This second edition of the Index evaluated 31 brands and retailers, 12 more brands that add to the 19 analyzed in 2020. Of this group of brands, 28 are nationally owned and 3 are international. 23% of the total belong to the footwear sector and the remaining 77% to the clothing sector, Efraín Martínez, National Coordinator of Fashion Revolution México and Lorena Cortés, Executive Director of Arlenica, reported at a press conference.
The brands analyzed are: Aldo Conti, Andrea, Brantano, C&A, Charly, Cklass, Coppel, Dorothy Gaynor, El Palacio de Hierro, Ferrioni, Flexi, Ilusión, Ivonne, Julio, Levi's Strauss de México, Liverpool, Liz Minelli, Long Beach Polo Club, Mariscal, Marsel, Men's Fashion, Milano, Oggi, Price Shoes, Quarry, Sears, Sexy Jeans, TT Blues Jeans, Verochi, Yale México and Zara. The managers indicated that the average score for the five sections evaluated was: Policies and America Cell Phone Number List Commitments 13%, which, like last year, remains the section with the highest levels of disclosure, followed by Governance 9%, Traceability 5%, Know , Show and Fix 4% and Featured Themes 6%. The brands that show slight progress in terms of the information they publish, compared to the results they obtained in the 2020 Index are: Oggi Jeans (3%) and Coppel (4%) with an increase of 3 percentage points and the brand Andrea footwear (2%) and Liverpool (9%) with an increase of two percentage points.
However, 52% of Mexican brands do not reveal any data or information related to the indicators established in the methodology. Relevant changes in the 2021 Index: Brands' response to COVID-19 and Culture Projection This year's Index addressed the issue of demonstrating respect for the intellectual property of the culture and heritage of indigenous and Afro-Mexican communities, by including an indicator on evidence of a policy in retail companies that shows consent, credit and compensation for any design practice that comes from an indigenous community, information that only 6% of the brands, El Palacio de Hierro and Zara, make known. Based on the global impact that the pandemic has had on the fashion industry this year, indicators were included on the proactive response of brands to COVID-19, where it was found that 90% of brands do not reveal the evidence they seek. the Index on changes made to purchasing practices with suppliers as a result of the economic pressures of the pandemic.
The brands analyzed are: Aldo Conti, Andrea, Brantano, C&A, Charly, Cklass, Coppel, Dorothy Gaynor, El Palacio de Hierro, Ferrioni, Flexi, Ilusión, Ivonne, Julio, Levi's Strauss de México, Liverpool, Liz Minelli, Long Beach Polo Club, Mariscal, Marsel, Men's Fashion, Milano, Oggi, Price Shoes, Quarry, Sears, Sexy Jeans, TT Blues Jeans, Verochi, Yale México and Zara. The managers indicated that the average score for the five sections evaluated was: Policies and America Cell Phone Number List Commitments 13%, which, like last year, remains the section with the highest levels of disclosure, followed by Governance 9%, Traceability 5%, Know , Show and Fix 4% and Featured Themes 6%. The brands that show slight progress in terms of the information they publish, compared to the results they obtained in the 2020 Index are: Oggi Jeans (3%) and Coppel (4%) with an increase of 3 percentage points and the brand Andrea footwear (2%) and Liverpool (9%) with an increase of two percentage points.
However, 52% of Mexican brands do not reveal any data or information related to the indicators established in the methodology. Relevant changes in the 2021 Index: Brands' response to COVID-19 and Culture Projection This year's Index addressed the issue of demonstrating respect for the intellectual property of the culture and heritage of indigenous and Afro-Mexican communities, by including an indicator on evidence of a policy in retail companies that shows consent, credit and compensation for any design practice that comes from an indigenous community, information that only 6% of the brands, El Palacio de Hierro and Zara, make known. Based on the global impact that the pandemic has had on the fashion industry this year, indicators were included on the proactive response of brands to COVID-19, where it was found that 90% of brands do not reveal the evidence they seek. the Index on changes made to purchasing practices with suppliers as a result of the economic pressures of the pandemic.