Words and actions: lessons from Unilever’s supply chain

Oxfam Governance, Private sector, Rights

OPINION:

Five years ago, Oxfam and Unilever agreed to an unusual collaboration. Oxfam conducted a study on labour rights in Unilever’s Vietnam supply chain and operations. Liesbeth Unger founder of Human Rights@Work, and adviser and co-writer of Oxfam’s previous Unilever report asks, why did Unilever do it? How did they perform? And what can other companies seeking to improve their labour rights credentials learn from
this study?

‘You are what you do, not what you say you’ll do’ (C.G. Jung)

Why did Unilever open itself up to scrutiny?

The new Oxfam Unilever progress report on labour rights in Vietnam is out. Unilever has provided Oxfam with all the necessary information to assess its performance on labour rights in practice.

If Unilever were such a fantastic marketing machine, as some say, why would it expose itself in such a way? Is this also marketing?Since the first report was published in 2013, Unilever has presented itself as a leader in social impact and human rights. It has developed a human rights policy and published a Human Rights Report. However, at least once a year, the media report about a human rights issue linked to Unilever products, including child labour in tea plantations.

Oxfam has also identified problems around wages, collective bargaining and gender inequality, persisting both in Unilever Vietnam’s own factory and with that of its suppliers. There’s plenty of room for improvement.

Honesty and openness make you vulnerable. So why is Unilever engaging in such a research exercise with Oxfam again? If Unilever were such a fantastic marketing machine, as some say, why would it expose itself in such a way? Is this also marketing?

What Unilever is doing benefits them on two counts. Firstly, it confirms their leadership, not so much in performance on human rights but in transparency and willingness to learn. Secondly, it improves Unilever’s risk management. Not only by preventing human rights risks but by improving its understanding of how an important stakeholder such as Oxfam looks at these issues. Despite Unilever’s improved risk management on human rights, Oxfam’s assessment identifies risks Unilever didn’t know it had.

How did Unilever perform?

Respecting human rights is about doing the right thing and doing things right. We read in the report about a company that has committed itself to do the right things. However, it is also about a company that is on a journey to discover how to do these things right. Let me give two examples:

1. Convincing suppliers to respect international human rights

International human rights sometimes go beyond national law or at least beyond national custom. Unilever’s Responsible Sourcing Policy is filled with doing the right things, such as paying fair compensation, respecting freedom of association, etc.

Training is a first step Unilever has taken. Not only did they train the suppliers themselves, they also trained their own procurement staff. Awareness has increased. What did not happen, however, was getting suppliers to really understand why this is important for their own business. They fear cost increases and Unilever is not willing to pay for these costs, or to reward them with incentives (yet). I therefore wonder whether Unilever sees the business case itself. Is it really fundamental to the way they do business, as they claim in the Human Rights Report? If this is the case, they
will need to reconcile commercial and human rights requirements and show suppliers how to do the same.

2. Ensuring a living wage is being paid

In the first report, Oxfam advised Unilever to commit to a living wage, as they found workers even in Unilever’s own factory who could not make ends meet. Unilever took up the challenge and approved a Fair Compensation Framework in late 2015 to deliver fair compensation across its operations by 2020. Although Oxfam found that wages for Unilever Vietnam’s blue collar workers increased significantly (48%) over the four year period, it also found that some workers were still struggling to make ends meet. Unilever requires suppliers to pay the minimum wage and work towards a good
practice of a living wage. No evidence was found that action by Unilever had increased wages in the supply chain.

Ensuring that all workers earn wages that meet their basic needs is not so easy when the underlying business model remains the same, as Oxfam also points out. Is Unilever prepared to understand this and address this barrier?

What can other companies learn from Unilever’s journey?

The report has many interesting details and learning points for other companies and those seeking to influence them. For example:

  • For companies who are hesitant to speak out and show a strong commitment: it is possible to explain to stakeholders that you cannot get there tomorrow. It needs time and a process has to be in place. Be transparent about this.
  • An effective grievance mechanism is a strong instrument with the potential to get burning issues out in the open. Trust is key. Many existing mechanisms are not trusted by workers and are therefore not used.
  • Show the business case for human rights to suppliers.
  • Workers, especially vulnerable workers (blue collar workers with dependents, migrants, women), are important sources of information. Listening to them is key when you want to do the right things right.
  • Contract labour in Unilever’s own operation and supply chain has been successfully reduced. For the supply chain, this was done by monitoring and checking by UVN procurement to ensure suppliers’ production could be done in legal working hour.

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Photo: Training for migrant workers in Hanoi, as part of an Oxfam-funded programme designed to empower workers to claim their rights from their employer or local authority. Credit: Oxfam in Vietnam

Author: Liesbeth Unger
Archive blog. Originally posted on Oxfam Policy & Practice.