Chocolates Bittersweet Economy
By: Steve • Research Paper • 3,303 Words • November 11, 2009 • 1,229 Views
Essay title: Chocolates Bittersweet Economy
Chocolate’s Bittersweet Economy
Issues involved
The main issue discussed in this article is that of illegal child labor in the cocoa industry in the South Western Ivory Coast, Africa, mainly illustrated with the example of the small village Sinikosson. 70 percent of all cocoa beans are grown in Africa, and 40 percent alone in the Ivory Coast, making it the number one profit of the country. Villages lack electricity, running water, health services and schools, and the cocoa harvesting season is a rough climatic challenge where children work under brutal conditions.
Outside of Sinikosson, children, mostly under the age of ten, wield cocoa plants with machetes, handle pesticides and carry heavy loads at the cost of their education, health, and with severe consequences such as frequent work accidents. The parents of the children cannot afford school fees and hence, the children have to help feed the family, which prevents them from getting a proper education and harms their physique at an early age. Officially, Ivory Coast law bans child labor and the official working age is eighteen. However, there are several reasons and factors of why children still do not have the possibility to go to school and spend their time with hard labor instead.
Causes
Essentially poverty is the main reason for child labor in the Ivory Coast cocoa industry. If prices of cocoa are high, farmers can afford an education for their children. With incomes low, parents depend on government to provide for education, which in turn depends on the fiscal system fed by taxes from citizen's income. A vicious circle. Cocoa prices have been declining in recent years because of corruption and poorly planned economic liberalization. And if cocoa prices should rise in the next couple of years as a consequence of increased demand in China, India and other emerging markets and an increase in financial speculation on natural resources, who can be so sure that the Ivory Coast small cocoa producer will benefit from it? Some time ago, President Felix Houphouet-Boigny who has ruled over Ivory Coast from the late 50s to the mid 90s brought immigrants from the neighboring countries to Ivory Coast to produce cocoa, but without giving them a legal status. Through the cocoa planting, Ivory Coast became one of the most prosperous and stable countries in Africa, but President Houphouet-Boigny spent the profits on prestige projects such as the largest basilica in the world, instead of setting up education and social services, as well as giving subsidies to the farmers. This shows that in view of living conditions markets and prices, politics and governance are one complex issue that cannot be dealt with separately. In addition, Civil War broke out between 2002 and 2004, in which all the profits of the cocoa industry went to armed forces, creating misery for the common people. Cocoa quickly became a conflict resource called “Blood Chocolate”. Now after the war, Cocoa farmers are trapped in their villages since corrupt police demands bribes to let them pass and market their products in the cities markets. During the Civil War, child labor also increased, but it was almost impossible for organizations to monitor.
On the other hand, governmental bodies now collect three times as much taxes and money from the cocoa sector than before, but little money is spent on infrastructure and education. This is due to an even greater problem. According to Transparency, an NGO dealing with global corruption, the Ivory Coast government is ranked as one of the most corrupt governments in the world.
This leads back to the cocoa industry system itself. Big cocoa exporters such as Cargill, Archer Daniels Midland, Burry Callebaut and Sat-Cacao, do not own plantations themselves, but buy beans from middlemen called �pisteurs’ and �treton’. These middlemen own warehouses and flatbed trucks with which they travel deep in the jungle to buy cocoa from the small independent farmers. Hence, the big exporters are not directly involved with the issue of child labor, but more the government and the intermediaries who control the supply chain, profit margins and thus also income. This is one of the reasons why, in this case, corporate governance has not yet stretched out to the issue of fair prices and legal working conditions for the cocoa producers.
Financial support in the form of providing finance via credit does not seem to help either. Cargill, one of the big US companies provides working capital to buy fertilizers and private credit to support living but payback becomes a problem when prices fall. This might lead to increasing profits on Cargill's side, but also produces write-offs and misery. A debt burden tightens the budget in families and education