maquiladora
English
Etymology
Borrowed from Spanish maquiladora.
Noun
maquiladora (plural maquiladoras)
- An assembly plant in Mexico owned by a company from the United States or another foreign country, using cheap local labour and imported components, and which then exports its products to the company's country of origin; also (by extension) similar factories in other countries. [from 20th c.]
- 2013, Amy Wilentz, Farewell, Fred Voodoo, Simon & Schuster 2013, p. 114:
- If such maquiladora projects are to be the model for Haiti's economic future, they will simply create future generations of sweatshop labor at subsistence wages.
- 2014, Ed Vulliamy, The Guardian, 4 May:
- The girls were invariably captured while running errands in the centre of town, or on their way to or from work in the hundreds of maquiladoras: sweatshop assembly plants that constitute the economy of Juárez, manufacturing (for rock-bottom wages) the goods that America and Europe deem essential to keep their supermarket shelves and car-concession outlets stocked.
- 2013, Amy Wilentz, Farewell, Fred Voodoo, Simon & Schuster 2013, p. 114:
Translations
an assembly plant in Mexico near the border with the United States
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Portuguese
Noun
maquiladora f (plural maquiladoras)
- feminine singular of maquilador
- maquiladora (an assembly plant in Mexico near the border with the United States)
Spanish
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /makilaˈdoɾa/, [makilaˈðoɾa]
Descendants
- → English: maquiladora
Further reading
- “maquiladora” in Diccionario de la lengua española, Vigésima tercera edición, Real Academia Española, 2014.
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