Apparel and accessories retailer Gap Inc. wants its leading suppliers to stop paying workers in cash by 2020 and instead pay them digitally.
San Francisco-based Gap, which had nearly $16 billion in sales last year and owns the Old Navy, Gap, Banana Republic, and Athleta brands, said this week that it set the digital-payments goal for all of its so-called tier 1 suppliers, which operate approximately 800 factories in 30 countries. More than 60% of Gap’s supplier factories already provide digital-payment methods, including online transfers to bank accounts or mobile wallets, a Gap news release says.
“The new goal will help scale this progress across the company’s global supply chain and positively impact the lives of more than 1 million garment workers,” the company said.
Gap said women comprise about 80% of the garment industry’s workforce, and they often live in countries with cash-based economies and little access to mainstream financial services. “Electronic wage-payment methods have the benefit of drawing previously unbanked workers into the formal financial system, allowing women greater control over their finances and a safer way to save, send money, and invest,” the company said.
As part of the initiative, Gap said it had joined the Better Than Cash Alliance, a United Nations-based partnership of governments, companies, and international organizations that promotes the transition from cash to digital payments in order to reduce poverty and promote economic growth. Funders of the 60-member Alliance include Visa Inc. and Mastercard Inc.
A Gap spokesperson was unavailable Friday for further comment.