But few companies they have the worldwide reach of Unilever. The consumer goods giant sells more than 400 brands in 190 countries and its products are used by 2.5 billion people.
Unilever said a living wage should allow workers to break the cycle of poverty. “It allows people to pay for a decent standard of living, which covers a family’s basic needs: food, water, housing, education, health, transportation, clothing; and includes a provision for unexpected events,” he added.
Priority will be given to countries in Africa and South America and others that supply Unilever with key commodities, such as India, Malaysia and Indonesia.
“It is important that it is done with complete transparency [and] salary targets and vital incomes set in different parts of the world are determined independently … and not something that Unilever sets or influences in any way, ”they told CNN Business.
Unilever currently requires its suppliers to pay legal minimum wages. Ingram said he will work with NGOs, suppliers, other companies and governments in an effort to establish living wages for the countries where he operates.
“The core of what we are trying to do is make a systemic change [and] broad enough for sectors and governments to ideally institute the living wage as a natural basis, ”Ingram said.
The cost of a living wage
Asked whether Unilever’s margins would be reduced by its commitment to a living wage, Ingram said there would be a cost to the company and its suppliers, but that it would be “absorbed by the value chain” and, in some cases, covered helping suppliers to be more productive.
For example, developing sustainable farming systems in poor countries could increase crop yields and increase farmers ’incomes. “We’re not exactly sure what that gap and cost will be, but what we’re sure of is that the consumer won’t end up paying more,” he added.
But Fairtrade International said the price should be an “integral part of any wage commitment” to avoid negative impacts on producers and their workforce. “There is a correlation, for example, between very low wages on tea farms and consumer prices,” Wilbert Flinterman, a senior adviser on workers ’rights and union relations, told CNN Business.
“Closing the wage gap completely will depend on commitment and collaboration between different actors in the supply chain, from producers to traders and retailers,” he said.