SORU: aşağıdaki parçaya göre cevaplayınız
The author points out that the RMG-workers in Bangladesh differ from other developing-country workers in that ----.
A garment factory complex in Savar, Bangladesh, Rana
Plaza, collapsed on 24 April 2013. The collapse of Rana
Plaza, a structurally deficient eight-story building, was a
local disaster with global implications. Bangladesh is the
world’s second biggest manufacturer of ready-made
garments (RMG) after China. The industry is
responsible for nearly 80% of the country’s exports,
earning $19 billion annually, or about 13% of its GDP
(Gross Domestic Product). Some 4 million Bangladeshis
– mostly undereducated villagers – work in the country’s
RMG trade, making T-shirts and jeans for top
international brands. Pictures of the collapse put an
intimate face on what is, in Bangladesh, a crucial but
poorly regulated and often dangerous industry. In early
June 2013, six weeks after Rana Plaza fell, a
photographer and a reporter teamed up to trace the
backstories of the Rana Plaza survivors and victims to
try to learn how they lived and died. What they found out
was that Bangladesh’s RMG workers follow a common
developing-world pattern: leave the familiarity of the
village for the harsh uncertainty of the city in the hope
that higher urban wages translate into a better life for
their families and for later generations. What sets
Bangladeshi garment workers apart is that they lose
their lives on the job with depressing frequency