The World Benchmarking Alliance
(WBA) has published its first Social
Benchmark
assessing the world’s 2,000 most influential companies on their responsibility
in meeting society’s fundamental expectations towards three measurement areas —
respecting human rights, providing decent work and acting ethically. The
Benchmark reveals significant gaps and areas in which companies urgently need to
make progress to ensure no one is left behind as we create an equal, inclusive
and just society.
The world’s 2,000 most influential companies — what the WBA has dubbed the
SDG2000 — include some of
the largest apparel and food brands and generate revenue equivalent to 45
percent of global GDP. They employ 95 million people directly and hundreds of
millions more indirectly through their value chains, and play a key role in
helping — or hindering — achievement of the
Sustainable Development Goals.
Alarmingly, 90 percent of the assessed companies are not even halfway to meeting
fundamental societal expectations on human rights, decent work and ethical
conduct. Over 30 percent of companies score between 0 and 2 points out of 20
total possible points.
“The SDG2000 companies have resources and influence equivalent to some of the
biggest countries, impacting more people than the populations of many nations,”
said Namit Agarwal, Social
Transformation Lead at the World Benchmarking Alliance. “The fact that 90
percent of these companies are failing to act on fundamental social expectations
shows the state of play of the private sector. Demonstrating leadership in
creating an equal, inclusive and just world could significantly aid governments
in eradicating poverty, reducing inequality and ensuring access to decent work
for all. Regulation, guidance and external pressure are necessary to steer
businesses in the right direction.”
WBA is calling on leaders, including policymakers and investors, to ensure
companies are held accountable for meeting fundamental societal expectations
through four priority areas:
Commit to paying a living wage and preventing excessive working hours
There is a mismatch between what companies disclose on decent work and
society’s expectation of them: Over 60 percent of companies have some disclosure
on decent wages and over 45 percent have some on working hours. However, only 4
percent of companies commit to or are currently paying their employees a living
wage, and only 3 percent have a working-hours policy that complies with
International Labor Organization (ILO)
standards.
Governments can help by implementing policies that ensure regular reviews and
minimum-wage adjustments to align with living costs. They can also provide
support for small and medium enterprises to promote collective bargaining and
implement complementary social policies to reduce the burden of living costs on
low-wage workers, especially in supply chains.
Be transparent in lobbying to avoid undue political influence
Only 11 percent of the 2,000 most influential companies have established a
policy that publicly sets out their lobbying and political engagement
approach.
A mere 5 percent of companies assessed in the benchmark disclose data on their
lobbying
expenditures.
To maintain credibility, companies must ensure that their publicly stated
social-sustainability strategies are consistent with their lobbying
activities
behind the scenes.
Engage with affected stakeholders to help improve decent work practices
Only 9 percent of companies communicate examples of how they engage with
affected or potentially affected stakeholders — including employees, trade
unions, suppliers, civil society and local communities. Companies that engage
with affected stakeholders perform better on average across every indicator in
the benchmark — including commitments to respect human rights and provide decent
work through respecting worker health and promoting equality.
Regulation, guidance, pressure are essential for driving change
Companies headquartered in countries with human rights legislation score
nearly 60 percent higher on human rights due diligence (HRDD) than those
in countries without such regulations. Still, only 6 percent of companies have
fully implemented them.
Two trends emerge among the 6 percent companies that fully meet the HRDD
indicators. Firstly, they are primarily from regions with robust government
guidance and regulatory frameworks on human rights — namely,
Europe
and parts of East Asia. Secondly, they tend to operate in high-impact
sectors that have been subject to greater public scrutiny and are better
equipped with detailed HRDD tools and guidelines.
Governments can set minimum legal standards of behavior expected from companies
of all sizes and operating contexts on HRDD to prevent and address their human
rights risks and
impacts
in alignment with the UN Guiding Principles on Human Rights, while investors and
the civil society should continue applying collective pressure on low-scoring
companies and advocating for robust due diligence processes.
Sectoral insights
While the overall average of all 2,000 companies is low (23 percent), some
sectors on average perform relatively better, including Apparel & Footwear
(33 percent), ICT (30 percent) and Retail (28 percent). A major
commonality among these sectors is that they are all consumer-facing, so the
costs of failing stakeholder expectations are greater. Companies within these
sectors are more prone to public scrutiny on their human rights performance —
particularly by consumers, who would themselves be impacted by the products or
services or put off by human rights abuses within the supply
chain.
The Apparel & Footwear sector has the best performance overall — scoring the
highest in respecting human rights and providing decent work. Meanwhile, the ICT
sector performs best in acting
ethically,
which could be a result of the sector being subject to stringent regulations
regarding data protection and privacy, ICT also performs best in the
anti-bribery and anti-corruption indicators.
Regional insights
Companies headquartered in the Pacific, Europe and North America perform
relatively better overall. Nevertheless, all regions except for Central Asia
are represented in the top 10 percent of companies — showing that responsible
social practices are possible despite regional differences. Company commitment
is the determining factor.
Companies headquartered within the European Union (average total score of 34
percent) and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and
Development (average total score of 28 percent)
score greater on average than the overall benchmark average (23 percent),
whereas companies within the G20 score on average slightly less than the
overall average. This signals the need for harmonization both within and across
these groups, and the opportunity for global dialogue to address such gaps.
Pacific
Companies based in the Pacific score the highest overall and across all three
measurement areas. The region has the greatest proportion of companies that
demonstrate efforts to pay supply chain workers a living
wage
(11 percent) and disclose the amount of corporate income tax paid for each tax
jurisdiction where they reside (19 percent). This is primarily due to
Australian companies — where 19 percent disclose their income taxes paid,
compared to the benchmark average of 9 percent of companies.
The top-scoring companies in the region are Coles Group and Woolworths
Group, both scoring 13 points out of 20 possible points.
Europe
European companies perform relatively well in all three measurement areas,
ranking second-highest overall after Pacific-based companies. Europe has the
greatest proportion of companies that disclose that employees are already paid a
living wage or there are targets to do so (10 percent) and publicly expect their
suppliers to comply with the ILO standard on working hours (12 percent). Europe
also has the greatest proportion of companies (47 percent) that disclose a tax
strategy.
The top-scoring companies in the region are EDP, Glencore, Unilever
and Yara — all scoring 15.5 points out of 20 possible points.
North America
Companies based in North America perform third in the benchmark overall with an
average total score of 24 percent, lagging behind those based in the Pacific (35
percent) and Europe (33 percent). The companies based in the United States,
which equate to nearly a quarter of the benchmark’s assessed companies, have an
average score that corresponds to the overall average score of 23 percent.
The top-scoring companies in the region are Hershey, Newmont, Teck
Resources and VF Corporation — all scoring 15 points out of 20 possible
points.
Asia
The benchmark breaks down Asia into four regions — with Southeast Asia
scoring the highest average total score of 21 percent, followed by Central Asia
(19 percent), East Asia (14 percent) and South Asia (14 percent).
Performance varies between and within regions. For example, if we were to remove
Chinese companies from East Asia’s average, the average of the companies
headquartered in the remaining economies — Japan, the Republic of Korea,
Taiwan and Hong Kong — would increase from 14 percent to 28 percent. In
terms of working hours, Central Asia has the greatest proportion of companies
(11 percent) that commit to the ILO standards in their own operations; but
Indonesian (Southeast Asia) companies stand out — with 19 percent of
companies committing such practice, compared to 3 percent across all 2,000
companies.
The top-scoring company in the region is Singapore’s Wilmar
International,
with 14.5 points out of 20 possible points.
Middle East & North Africa (MENA)
Companies based in MENA have the poorest performance in the benchmark (average
total score of 11 percent) — scoring low in all three measurement areas. Only 6
percent of companies in MENA commit to the ILO core labor standards in their own
operations, while no companies in the region demonstrate efforts to pay supply
chain workers a living wage or commitment to the ILO standards on working hours
in their operations.
Despite this general trend, good practice is possible within the region.
Fertilizer giant OCP from Morocco scores the highest in the benchmark
overall, with 14.5 points; it is the only company based in MENA that is among
the top 10 percent of companies in the benchmark.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jul 2, 2024 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST