The U.S. Department of State has drawn a similar conclusion. Their 2019 Trafficking in Persons report references cases of boys being trafficked in the Ivorian cocoa sector – as was the case 20 years ago.
Yet these investigations are only able to document a fraction of the problem. Trafficking victims, especially child laborers who are in debt bondage, are incredibly hard to find and even harder to document. They are afraid they will be arrested or sent back and their parents may suffer repercussions as a result. Meanwhile, the cocoa farmers themselves are barely able to send their own children to school due to the lack of schools and their own extreme poverty. The Voice Network estimated in its 2018 Cocoa Barometer that cocoa farmers in Ghana and Ivory Coast are earning less than a third of what they need for a living income. Last month, both governments moved to set a minimum price for cocoa beans, which some hope will help efforts to address extreme poverty among cocoa farmers.
It’s important to recognize efforts on the ground and the First Lady of Ivory Coast has admirably reinvigorated her country’s fight against child labor, creating the National Oversight Committee, which obliges companies to report on their myriad social interventions to a government coordinating body. But industry commitments are still voluntary and resources insufficient for the scale of the problem. In 2010, chocolate industry leaders renewed their commitment to the Harkin-Engel Protocol, committing to a 70 percent reduction of the worst forms of child labor by 2020. Yet a DOL-funded study from 2015 showed minimal progress and leading initiatives to monitor child labor and improve cocoa farmers’ welfare are currently only designed to reach 15 percent and 18 percent of the affected population.
For twenty years of industry initiatives to have had so little impact is unacceptable. Moreover, it is extremely unlikely they have made a dent in the much harder to find problem of forced child labor.
Clearly more needs to be done to snap the industry out of another twenty years of lackluster efforts. It’s time for CBP to prevent cocoa harvested using forced child labor from entering the United States. Decisive action by CBP should then be followed on immediately with a binding commitment from industry leaders to ensure adequate financing for solutions that are developed through a transparent process, negotiated in collaboration with farmers, farm worker organizations, and child rights advocates.
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