$20 a Month: "Made in Bangladesh" by Brown Kids
From [HERE] Bangladesh’s garment industry is responsible for nearly 80 percent of the country’s exports - mainly to Europe and the United States - and is the country's single greatest source of economic growth.
An estimated 2-3 million Bangladeshis are employed in more than 4,000 factories all over the country, not including the thousands of sub-suppliers.
About 80 percent of the working force are women. Sub-suppliers often employ children under the age of 14, although this violates national law. Workers are often underpaid: many factories pay as little as 1,500-2,000 taka ($19-26) a month, though by law the minimum wage is higher than this. Workers often toil for up to 12 hours a day, six days a week. [MORE]
According to Dr. Blynd, a McJob is a "low pay," low prestige, low benefit, no benefit, no future job in the feudal looks-like-it-could-be food chain service (servitude) sector of the New God Economy. (See: Ploiter & Eyeservant). [MORE].