The article in the url below provides an update on my recent newsletter about child labor in the U.S. (see Strategic CSR – Child labor (in the U.S.)). I think the report reveals a remarkably quick reaction from the companies that were named in The NYT's initial article:
"Now, McDonald's says it is requiring private inspectors to review overnight shifts at slaughterhouses that provide some of its meat, where children as young as 13 were cleaning heavy machinery. Suppliers for Ford Motor Company must now scrutinize the faces of employees when they arrive for work. Costco is commissioning more audits with Spanish-speaking inspectors."
The response illustrates the central concept within Strategic CSR of stakeholders holding firms to account for their actions. In this case, the key stakeholders (the media) exposed the offensive behavior, which generated additional backlash from other stakeholders, and a subsequent adjustment by the firms. In this sense, firms are merely the reflection of the aggregated interests of their collective set of stakeholders – they will do what their stakeholders (truly) want, which firms can identify when those stakeholders reward the behavior they support and punish the behavior they do not support:
"Along with McDonald's and Costco, Starbucks, Whole Foods and PepsiCo are revising the kinds of audits they require at their suppliers. The changes include enhancing reviews of night shifts and shifts run by outside contractors, such as cleaning companies, and moving away from announcing audits in advance."
Now, it is up to stakeholders to follow-up and ensure the announced response becomes actual behavior.
Take care
David
David Chandler
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Confronted With Child Labor in the U.S., Companies Move to Crack Down
By Hannah Dreier
February 8, 2024
The New York Times
Late Edition – Final
A22