Businesses are coming under increased public scrutiny over the use of slavery in their supply chains, making forced labor one of the greatest risks to their brands’ reputation this year, a research firm said yesterday.
Legislation in countries such as Britain and the US requires businesses to report on their efforts to eradicate forced labor and trafficking from their supply chains. Britain’s law came into force last year.
This increased public reporting empowers consumers and rights groups to put pressure on companies to promote ethical business activities, said British firm Verisk Maplecroft, based in Bath, England, which identifies emerging risk areas for companies with global supply chains.
“The trend toward mandatory reporting means that the public can now more easily scrutinize and compare the actions businesses take — or do not take — to respect workers,” Verisk Maplecroft principal human rights analyst Alexandra Channer said.
“Maplecroft expects public benchmarking of business practices to increase in 2016, as part of a wider shift from voluntary to mandatory reporting of human rights due diligence,” the firm said in a statement.
Although many businesses have developed ways to monitor working conditions in companies supplying them directly, they have less awareness of suppliers further down the supply chain, the firm said in a report.
“Businesses are therefore largely unprepared to prevent the risk that public scrutiny of suppliers at source may uncover severe labor violations, such as modern slavery, affecting workers contributing to their end-product,” the report said.
Increasing public scrutiny of workers’ conditions in plantations, fishing vessels and factories, is also entrenching the assumption that brands are ultimately responsible for all workers who contribute to the commodities they use, it said.
Although the financial penalties for non-reporting are negligible, the potential reputation costs to major brands are “high,” the firm said.
Nearly 21 million people are victims of forced labor, which generates about US$150 billion a year in illegal profits, according to the International Labour Organization.
Last month, a study by KnowTheChain found that just four of 20 companies surveyed were fully open about disclosure and the way they track and deal with forced labor in their supply chains.
The study did not disclose individual performances of the 20 companies, which included Gap Inc, Nike Inc, Nestle S.A., Unilever PLC, Apple Inc, Hennes & Mauritz AB and Samsung Electronics Co Ltd.
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