Skip to main content
BoF Logo

Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.

US Fashion Lobby Warns Trump Cuts Threaten Key Supply-Chain Programmes

The Labour Department is cancelling more than $500 million of funding for programmes that combat child labour, forced labour and human trafficking abroad, further reducing funding for international human rights efforts.
Commuters cross Pennsylvania Avenue in downtown Washington, DC.
The Trump administration's spending cuts are hitting programmes the fashion industry relies upon to address risks like forced and child labour and human trafficking. (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images)

The American Apparel & Footwear Association has warned Trump administration cuts to spending on international labour programmes risk harming US business interests.

The US Department of Labour is ending all grants run by its Bureau of International Affairs (ILAB), cancelling more than $500 million in funding for initiatives that combat child labour, forced labour and human trafficking, The Washington Post reported this week.

“ILAB, through its grants, technical assistance, and direct support, works to build institutions in countries around the world so that they can effectively raise labor standards and eliminate opportunities for less scrupulous foreign businesses to profit from labor abuses while American businesses and workers play by the rules,” the AAFA said in a statement Wednesday. “With today’s elimination of ILAB’s grants, we will be moving from an even playing field to an uphill battle.”

The move comes on top of steep cuts to America’s international aid spending announced earlier this month.

ADVERTISEMENT

The ILAB cuts affect fashion industry initiatives including a programme to address violence against women in Lesotho, efforts prevent forced labour in Uzbekistan’s cotton industry and the UN’s Better Work programme, which supports many brands’ labour rights initiatives.

Learn more:

Trump’s Threat to Human Rights in Fashion’s Factories

Dramatic cuts to US foreign development spending are kneecapping the fragile network of civil society organisations and nonprofits that defend workers in the industry’s global supply chains.

© 2026 The Business of Fashion. All rights reserved. For more information read our Terms & Conditions

More from Sustainability
How fashion can do better for people and the planet.

Fashion Searches For a New Climate Solution

Coach-owner Tapestry’s new carbon-removal partnership and brands making fresh commitments to textile-to-textile recycling startups show an industry searching for ways to address its environmental impact.


Wool Workout Clothes? The Demand Is Growing

The consumer base for activewear made of natural materials like cotton and wool is growing, as more people on the political right join progressives in worrying about the health effects of polyester and other synthetics.


view more
Latest News & Analysis
Unrivalled, world class journalism across fashion, luxury and beauty industries.

Charlotte Tilbury on Remaking a Hero Product

By introducing a new version of her original Magic Cream, Tilbury treads into the tricky territory of reformulation, a necessary risk that can reinvigorate a staid product — or destroy a best-seller.


VIEW MORE
Agenda-setting intelligence, analysis and advice for the global fashion community.
CONNECT WITH US ON