Oxfam calls consumers and supermarkets to support government’s commitment to improve Assam tea sector

Oxfam calls consumers and supermarkets to support government’s commitment to improve Assam tea sector

  • By Oxfam India
  • 10 Oct, 2019
  • Oxfam research on working and living conditions of the tea plantation workers finds no toilets, crumbling houses, poor wages, lack of quality health and education entitlements
     
  •  Oxfam calls consumers, supermarkets and brands to support government’s commitment to provide living wages to workers

Assam government’s commitment to increase the minimum wages of tea plantation workers to Rs. 351 met with hurdles of financial viability of the sector. The upcoming Occupational Health and Safety Bill is an opportunity to address some of the hurdles. This bill can enable the struggling Assam tea industry to be viable and at the same time ensure fair living wages and decent working and living conditions for tea plantation workers and their families.

To ascertain the main challenges faced by workers and to find solutions Tata Institute of Social Sciences (TISS) and Oxfam India conducted a research. The report ‘Addressing The Human Cost of Assam Tea’ included in-depth interviews with 510 workers on 50 tea estates in Assam.

The research shows that the relentless squeeze by supermarkets and brands on the share of the end consumer price for tea makes poverty and hardship for workers in Assam more likely. But, combined with rising costs and the impacts of the climate crisis, it is also contributing to a severe economic crisis for the entire Indian tea industry.

The research also found that despite working for over 13 hours a day, workers earn between Rs. 137 - Rs. 167. It found that tea brands and supermarkets typically capture over two thirds of the price paid by consumers for Assam tea in India – with just 7% remaining for workers on tea estates.

Some of the key findings of the research are:

  • Many women tea pickers regularly clock up 13 hours of backbreaking work a day receiving between Rs 110 and Rs 130 a day. This wage is so low that half the workers interviewed, receive ‘Below Poverty Line’ ration cards from the government;
  • Indian tea estates are legally obliged under the Plantation Labour Act to provide decent working conditions, housing, healthcare and education. The condition of housing and sanitation is very poor with dilapidated or non-existent facilities. Around 45% of workers interviewed reported suffering from water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea, typhoid and jaundice, among others;
  • It is predominantly women who carry out the labour-intensive job of harvesting tea and end up being concentrated in these low-paid jobs. Women tea workers including unpaid domestic work, undertake up to 13 hours of physical labour per day after just six hours’ rest. Despite their large numbers, they remain under-represented in trade unions.
  • Some of key issues that women tea workers face include inaccessible toilets, inadequate maternal and childcare facilities, inadequate maternity benefits and domestic violence;
  • A 200 gms. packet of branded Assam tea is sold in India for Rs. 68. Of this, less than Rs. 5 is left for workers (using plucking costs as a proxy indicator) while tea brands and supermarkets retain around Rs. 40

Globally, supermarkets are taking an ever-increasing share of the price paid by shoppers – much of which is channelled to already wealthy shareholders and owners. In Germany and the United States supermarkets capture 87 and 76 percent of the price of a pack of black tea, with just 1 percent accruing to workers on tea estates. Tea workers receive just 2 cents from a packet of Assam black tea that sells for 75 cents in the Netherlands – just 14 cents per pack would be enough to ensure tea workers were paid a living wage

Amitabh Behar, CEO of Oxfam India said:

“We welcome the attempts of the government to increase the wages of tea plantation workers and the upcoming Occupational Health and Safety bill. Both have the potential to address the systemic injustice faced by the tea workers in Assam. However, our research points to the fact that the tea plantation workers and their families are living very vulnerable existence. The wages that they earn are very low and their working and living conditions call for an urgent response. 

Tea brands have often questioned the financial viability of paying fair wages to workers, but our research shows that by sharing just 2% additional value of the price of tea fair living wages can be provided to millions of workers in the sector.”

Indian tea sector continues to be the largest private sector employer but poor implementation of labour laws is putting at risk the viability of the tea industry as a whole.

The problems highlighted in this report are not exclusive to Assam – they are endemic and prevalent in other supply chains also. But, they are particularly acute in Assam.

Namit Agarwal, Private Sector Lead of Oxfam India said:

“Tea brands need to improve their transparency and accountability, in line with India’s National Guidelines on Responsible Business Conduct framework. They must inform consumers about where their tea comes from and how much is paid for it at each stage of the supply chain. It is also important that Indian consumers continue enjoying their cup of tea and at the same time demand fair living wages for workers.

The upcoming Occupational Health and Safety Bill gives an opportunity to the government to correct this systemic injustice.”

FOR MEDIA QUERIES PLEASE CONTACT Himanshi Matta, 91-8860182310, himanshi@oxfamindia.org 


Related Stories

India Discrimination Report

18 Mar, 2021

Mumbai

Sewing A Better Future

In Mumbai, livelihood trainings are being carried out among 12 SHGs in Govandi and Mankhurd. Despite the economy opening up, many have still not been able to either get their jobs back or restore the wages that they were getting pre-pandemic. The situation is worse for those who lost their sole breadwinners to the virus. Here's a story of 3 women who have been able to make ends meet, thanks to the livelihood training they received. These trainings are being done in collaboration with Siemens.
Read More

India Discrimination Report

10 Mar, 2021

Mayurbhanj, Odisha

Youth Volunteer As Teachers During Pandemic

Last year, the sudden lockdown led to the closure of more than a million schools throughout the country leading to disruption in education of school students. While children everywhere faced the impact of this discontinuity of their education, the situation proved to be more severe for children from remote rural areas who had no access to internet, smartphone or electricity to be able to access virtual classes. This problem was further exacerbated for tribal students who further faced the challenge with regard to the language of instruction used for classes that were being broadcast. This situation prompted the Dharamveer Youth Group from Prasan Chandrapur Village of Noto Panchayat to come forward and take the responsibility of supporting children from the community so that they could continue their education.
Read More

Economic Justice

14 Feb, 2021

Chhattisgarh & Jharkhand

Solar Boost For Rural Livelihood

Based on the success of the solar-powered Sal leaf plate making unit in Chhattisgarh, two more machines were installed in Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh. This value addition will improve the quality of the product and fetch better price than the traditional hand-made plates. These have been set up in Bade Gobra village in Mainpur block in Chhattisgarh's Gariaband district and in Mohanpur Village in Sundarpahari Block in Jharkhand's Godda district.
Read More

Humanitarian Response and DRR

11 Feb, 2021

Kushinagar, Uttar Pradesh

Making Toilets Sustainable

On February 2, 2021, Oxfam India handed over a Tiger Worm Toilet (TWT) complex to the Naurangiya panchayat in Uttar Pradesh’s Kushinagar district. Present at the handing over were community members and representatives from the Arohan Foundation and our on-ground partner PGVS. The toilet complex has five toilets and is built in the complex of the panchayat bhawan.
Read More

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