Oxfam plea to buy from labour-act followers

Oxfam plea to buy from labour-act followers

  • By The Telegraph
  • 14 Oct, 2019

Oxfam, a confederation of 20 organisations focusing on alleviation of global poverty, has asked tea brands to buy only from Assam producers who implement the Plantations Labour Act.

In its report on Addressing the Human Cost of Assam Tea — An Agenda for Change to Respect, Protect and Fulfil Human Rights on Assam Tea Plantations, which was released on Thursday, Oxfam said solutions lie in a fairer sharing of the end-consumer price of tea, stronger gender policies and a review of plantation labour laws to ensure that women and men in Assam can lead dignified lives.

It said new estimates, commissioned by Oxfam and undertaken by the Bureau for the Appraisal of Social Impacts for Citizen Information, show that supermarkets and tea brands in India retain more than half (58.2 per cent) of the final consumer price of black processed tea, with just 7.2 per cent for workers. It asked tea brands to favour suppliers who implement the act and incentivise and enable others to do so. Tea producers have been complaining that big buyers don’t pay enough.

The organisation said tea brands/supermarkets should work with suppliers, government and civil society to improve producers’ ability to provide decent housing, healthcare, water, sanitation and education through improved trading practices and external support. “This can be supported through paying higher prices for fresh tea leaves and excluding the costs of labour from price negotiations. It should ensure that tea is priced sustainably,” it said.

“It is difficult to trace most exported Assam tea to its origins. Many supermarkets fail to disclose the country or region of origin of their private label black tea. In India, supermarkets and tea brands also remain opaque about their supply chain relationships,” it said. It asked supermarkets and tea brands to publish the country and region of origin, supply chain information and distribution of end-consumer price on tea packaging.

Original article here

Related media coverage

1. Tea workers get a raw deal as brands, marts grab lion's share
2. Assam tea workers get only 7 percent of price, says report
3. 'Assam tea estates violating labour laws'
4. Assam tea workers get only 7 percent of price, says report
5. Assam tea workers get only 7% of price: Oxfam
6. Oxfam report flags Assam tea for labour rights violation
7. Study finds poor wages, housing, healthcare in Assam TEs
8. Oxfam blames brands for inequality to Assam tea workers
9. Assam tea workers get only 7 percent of price, says report
10. BIZ-TEA
11. Of Rs. 68 for 200 gm branded Assam tea, workers get only Rs. 5: Study
12. Assam tea workers get only 7 percent of price, says report
13. Supermarkets squeezing tea workers share in Assam tea price
14. Of Rs. 68 for 200 gm branded Assam tea, workers get only Rs. 5: Study 
15. Assam tea workers get only 7% of price says report
16. Oxfam calls consumers and supermarkets to support Assam tea sector workers' minimum wages hike
17. Assam tea workers get only 7% of price: Report
18. Assam tea workers get only 7 percent of price: Report
19. Assam tea: a glimpse of its forbidden history and incredible health benefits
20. Assam tea workers get only 7 percent of price, says report


Related Stories

Women Livelihood

18 Apr, 2022

Lakhimpur Kheri, Uttar Pradesh

Resource Centres Augment Income Of Women Farmers

In November 2020, members of the women farmer group ‘Gulab Mahila Kisan Samooh’ started a resource centre. Till date, the women farmers have accumulated Rs 8020 in this bank account. Among the villages in the project area, 11 women farmers’ resource centres have been formed. 285 women farmers associated with this project are availing of the direct benefits of resource centres.
Read More

Women Livelihood

05 Apr, 2022

Kalahandi, Odisha

Women Mushroom Farmers Cultivate An Empowered Future

Women mushroom farmers of Borbhata shared that mushroom cultivation is a profitable form of farming unlike traditional crops and vegetables. At present, the local market is growing and there is no problem in marketing mushrooms after harvesting. Through mushroom cultivation, the Borbhata women’s collective is headed towards a successful group enterprise. They have also become capable in meeting their household-level nutritional and financial needs.
Read More

Gender Justice

15 Mar, 2022

Kalahandi, Odisha

From a Survivor of Child Marriage to a Women’s Rights Champion

Shivaratri Patra is a survivor of child marriage who went on to become a pillar of support for the women in her community. She challenged the gender-based power structures in her village and ensured that the women and girls in her village take charge of their own destiny.
Read More

India Discrimination Report

07 Mar, 2022

Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh

Mission Sanjeevani Reaches The Musahars

Musahars are a community living in miserable conditions, Covid or no Covid. Priyansh Tripathi travels to Chhateri village where the musahar community continues to live in abject poverty and are worse off after the pandemic. Through Oxfam India's Mission Sanjeevani, dry ration and safety kits were distributed to the 500 families in the village. The ration kits including rice, dal and oil, were designed to cater to the needs of a family of five for a month.
Read More

img Become an Oxfam Supporter, Sign Up Today One of the most trusted non-profit organisations in India