Pervasive environmental and social problems in global cocoa supply chains will
persist unless companies pay farmers substantially more for their beans,
according to a major report on cocoa sustainability published earlier this
month.
Families in cocoa communities face a wide range of challenges — including
forced and child
labor;
gender inequality; (infant) malnutrition; lack of access to education;
insufficient healthcare facilities and sanitation; and a variety of labor-rights
violations for smallholders, workers and tenants. Environmental issues including
deforestation and climate change remain a growing concern.
The VOICE Network’s Cocoa
Barometer found farmer
poverty
to be the underlining driver of all of these issues. Current approaches to
tackle this problem are failing, because they are not taking into account a key
issue: Commodity prices remain far too low (and higher prices present their own
set of unsustainable challenges for
farmers).
Colonial-era dynamics in cocoa supply chains, which saw vast wealth extracted
from cocoa-producing regions, continue to influence corporate and political
attitudes to the problem.
As Antonie Fountain, director of the
VOICE Network, told
Reuters:
“We've got new data that shows you cannot have sustainable cocoa without higher
prices for farmers. It's just not going to work."
In order for living incomes to become a reality for cocoa farmers, VOICE Network
says action is needed on three separate fronts:
-
good governance policies by public bodies;
-
good purchasing practices by the private sector;
-
and good agricultural practices by farmers.
For the past two decades, however, almost all of the cocoa sector efforts have
been focused on farmers themselves, ignoring the necessary changes in government
policy and purchasing practices needed to tackle systemic sustainability issues such as poverty.
Shortly after the Cocoa Barometer's release, IDH — The Sustainable Trade Initiative launched a new, free resource
called the Living Wage Action Guide to
support companies working to close the living wage gap.
Part of IDH’s Roadmap on Living Wages,
the free Living Wage Action Guide helps companies find the path to the best
interventions for their situation. Browsing freely through the Guide,
identifying potential challenges and solutions is also possible. For each
intervention, practical tips and examples are provided.
The items in the Living Wage Action Guide and the linkages between the items are
based on a thorough assessment of international frameworks, guidelines and
publications in the living wage domain.
The Living Wage Action Guide aims to guide buyers, their suppliers and other
relevant actors towards the most appropriate actions they can take to close
living-wage gaps. Companies can use the Guide to navigate the challenges
inherent in efforts to achieve living wages in supply chains, and discover
specific steps they can take to address these challenges and create the enabling
conditions for living wages to be paid. The Guide was created by IDH; in
cooperation and consultation with a broad range of experts including
NewForesight, Ergon, Schuttelaar & Partners, and all partners of the
IDH Roadmap on Living Wages.
“We developed the Living Wage Action Guide with the aim to keep supporting
companies to progress living wages in their supply chains,” said Carla Romeu
Dalmau, senior
innovation manager of better jobs at IDH. “Using the IDH Living Wage Roadmap as
a guideline, the Action Guide is linked to step 4 of the Roadmap: taking action
to close living wage gaps in supply chains. The online Action Guide offers
practical tips, case studies, sectoral information and much more to support
companies on their journey towards a living wage. We hope the Living Wage Action
Guide will help companies make more informed decisions on how to close their
living wage gaps and support the efforts of creating a living wage economy
worldwide.”
The Guide is easy to use: By selecting the type of actor, companies can then
choose the impact area — which then links to the challenges that complicate
paying living wages. For each challenge, an intervention is recommended. Under
these interventions, companies can find suggested solutions, practical tips
(divided per changemaker, as each actor has a role to play), case studies and
more resources that can help to succeed this intervention.
There are 12 interventions listed — including improving procurement practices (a
buyer-led intervention), enhancing social dialogue (a supplier-led intervention,
with support of buyers), and improving policies in producing and consumer
countries. The practical tips come from real-world experiences from the partners
of the IDH Roadmap on Living Wages and from other companies; which IDH has
collected, systemized and conceptualized into actions. Supply chain actors can
visit www.livingwageguide.org to explore what
they can do on their own and where they need to collaborate with others.
IDH says it will continue to update and strengthen the guide and include data
and evidence where possible.
The Living Wage Action Guide is the latest component of IDH’s ever-expanding
work to enable a living-wage economy for smallholder farmers worldwide. In 2021,
the NGO joined forces with 10 global
companies
— Aldi Nord, Aldi Sud, Eosta, Fyffes,
Fairphone,
L’Oréal, Schijvens,
Superunie, Taylors of Harrogate and
Unilever — all actively
working towards ensuring living wages for workers throughout their supply
chains, and calling on other companies to do the same. Then, in July of this
year, B Corp certifier B Lab
launched new
guidance
for companies on implementing a living wage that aligns its approach with that
of IDH’s Roadmap on Living Wages to find living-wage benchmarks from
quality-assessed methodologies — making it easier for B Lab to increase the
number of benchmarks accepted, which means more companies can have their
living-wage
work
reflected in the B Impact Assessment.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Dec 29, 2022 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET