While world's biggest chocolate companies see their profits soar, they fail to keep their promises to improve the wages of the farmers who grow cocoa in Ghana, one of the main producing countries, NGO Oxfam denounced in a report.
In a report published Thursday (May 11) Oxfam
said earnings for US companies Hershey, Mars and Mondelez in addition to
Italy's Ferrero and Swiss peers Lindt & Spruengli and Nestle had increased
since the onset of the pandemic in 2020, a period when inflation has
skyrocketed.
The world’s four largest public chocolate
corporations: Hershey, Lindt, Mondelēz and Nestlé] together made nearly $15
billion in profits from their confectionary divisions alone since the pandemic
broke. This amount was up by an average 16 percent since 2020.
The giants paid out on average more than
their total net profits (113 percent) to shareholders between 2020 and 2022.
At the same time, an Oxfam survey of more
than 400 cocoa farmers in Ghana -- the second-largest global producer of the
commodity -- found their net incomes had fallen by an average of 16 percent
since the same period.
For women, the average drop was 22 percent,
it added.
No big money for farmers.
"There's big money in chocolate -- but
definitely not for farmers," said Oxfam International's interim executive
director, Amitabh Behar worded plainly.
"Cocoa farmers work extremely hard,
under gruelling conditions, yet can't always feed their families."
The charity claimed that up to 90 percent of
Ghanaian cocoa farmers do not earn a living income, "meaning they cannot
afford enough food or other basics such as clothing, housing and medical care.
Adding that "many of the 800,000 farmers in the country survive on just $2
a day."
The NGO also noted that while Ghana produces
about 15% of the world's beans, it receives only about 1.5% of the sector's
estimated $130 billion annual global earnings.
We 'do everything we can to help'
Giant Nestlé said that while it "cannot
influence the farm-gate prices due to the cocoa-trade structure in Ghana"
the company does "everything we can to help cocoa-farming families close
the living income gap".
It told AFP that it strives also to help improve
incomes for farmers in Ivory Coast, the world's biggest producer of cocoa.
Ivory Coast and Ghana, both located in West
Africa, together produce about two-thirds of the world's cocoa.
Ferrero said farmers in the countries receive
a cash premium on top of the commercial price for cocoa.
"We have been among the first companies
to fully support the Living Income Differential (LID)," it said in a
statement.
Ivory Coast and Ghana introduced the LID in
2019 to fight poverty among cocoa farmers in the global $130-billion chocolate
market.
But their trade boards say the scheme is
being undercut by buyers who depress the price of another premium based on bean
quality.
Mars, which said it was the first major
manufacturer to publicly support the LID, added that its direct financial
support to cocoa farmers goes beyond the poverty-fighting initiative.
"We also work on diverse initiatives...
with women and their families in cocoa growing communities to improve their
livelihoods."
A Lindt & Spruengli spokesperson said its
support also extended beyond LID to help improve farmers' earnings.
The group's own sustainability programme also
offers extra cash or in-kind premiums as well as funds for local supply-chain
actors and other measures to increase productivity.
Hershey meanwhile said it "has had a
long-term commitment to supporting increased incomes for cocoa farming
households".
The company said it was investing in
education in cocoa growing communities, and wanted to "address the
underlying factors that contribute to low farmer incomes.
Oxfam's Behar added on Thursday that
chocolate giants needed "to put their money where their mouth is".
"They must rid themselves of their
colonial legacy of extracting raw materials and keeping farmers in poverty
while making astronomical profits for their rich shareholders," he added.
Mondelez was also approached for comment but
have yet to respond to AFP.
AN
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