Haiti's Pepe Trade: How Secondhand American Clothes Became a First-Rate Business
"Haiti has practically become a trash can," says Ketcia Pierre-Louis, "where everything people in other countries don't need comes here."
Pierre-Louis is a businesswoman and affiliate of the
Croix-des-Bouquets Chamber of Commerce, just outside of
Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Like many critics of imported second-hand
clothing, which is known locally as "pepe," she
believes the practice undercuts domestic businesses and industries.
Some have even called for the government to ban the practice.
But Haiti's pepe trade
is decidedly a business-not a charity. In fact, it starts with
Haitian Americans buying goods at U.S. thrift stores and shipping
products to Port-au-Prince and other ports. Pepe may include
hand-me-downs, but the clothing is high-quality, stylish, and
cheap. More important, average Haitians prefer the choice of
wearing such apparel-and brands like Polo, Lacoste, and Converse-to
not having access to such products at all.
Far from turning Haiti into a trash can, the market in pepe shows how buyers and sellers enrich each other through exchange.
Produced by Tate Watkins and Jon Bougher.
Approximately 4 minutes.
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