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With its 2005 deadline to end child labour missed, the cocoa industry is bitterly behind – especially in Africa

Major chocolate companies and government bodies around the world are clambering to meet a new deadline next year, but as Peter Whoriskey and Rachel Siegel find out, they don’t seem to be on track to meet it

Tuesday 11 June 2019 14:45 BST
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A boy holds a machete on his way to a farm
A boy holds a machete on his way to a farm (Images Salwan Georges for The Washington Post)

Five boys are swinging machetes on a cocoa farm, slowly advancing against a wall of brush. Their expressions are deadpan, almost vacant, and they rarely talk. The only sounds in the still air are the whoosh of blades slicing through tall grass and metallic pings when they hit something harder. Each of the boys crossed the border months or years ago from the impoverished west African nation of Burkina Faso, taking a bus away from home and parents to Ivory Coast, where hundreds of thousands of small farms have been carved out of the forest.

These farms form the world’s most important source of cocoa, and are the setting for an epidemic of child labour that the world’s largest chocolate companies promised to eradicate nearly 20 years ago. “How old are you?” we ask one of the older-looking boys.

“19,” Abou Traore says in a hushed voice. Under Ivory Coast’s labour laws, that would make him legal. But as he talks, he casts nervous glances at the farmer who is overseeing his work from several steps away. When the farmer is distracted, Abou crouches and with his finger, writes a different answer in the grey sand: 15.

Abou Ouedrago, 15, from Burkina Faso, sleeps in a hut out in the woods, spends his days doing hard manual labour, doesn’t attend school or see his family (Salwan Georges)

Then, to make sure he is understood, he also flashes 15 with his hands. He says, eventually, that he’s been working the cocoa farms in Ivory Coast since he was 10. The other four boys say they are young, too – one says he is 15, two are 14 and another, 13. Abou says his back hurts, and he’s hungry. “I came here to go to school,” Abou says. “I haven’t been to school for five years now.”

The world’s chocolate companies have missed deadlines to uproot child labour from their cocoa supply chains in 2005, 2008 and 2010. Next year, they face another target date and, industry officials indicate, they will probably miss that too. As a result, the odds are substantial that a chocolate bar bought in the United States is the product of child labour.

About two-thirds of the world’s cocoa supply comes from west Africa where, according to a 2015 US Labour Department report, more than 2 million children were engaged in dangerous labour in cocoa-growing regions. When asked this spring, representatives of some of the biggest and best-known brands – Hershey, Mars and Nestlé – could not guarantee that any of their chocolates were produced without child labour. “I’m not going to make those claims,” an executive at one of the large chocolate companies said.

One reason is that nearly 20 years after pledging to eradicate child labour, chocolate companies still cannot identify the farms where all their cocoa comes from, let alone whether child labour was used in producing it. Mars, maker of M&M’s and Milky Way, can trace only 24 per cent of its cocoa back to farms; Hershey, the maker of Kisses and Reese’s, less than half; Nestlé can trace 49 per cent of its global cocoa supply to farms.

With the growth of the global economy, Americans have become accustomed to reports of worker and environmental exploitation in faraway places. But in few industries, experts say, is the evidence of objectionable practices so clear, the industry’s pledges to reform so ambitious and the breaching of those promises so obvious. Industry promises began in 2001 when, under pressure from the US congress, chiefs of some of the biggest chocolate companies signed a pledge to eradicate “the worst forms of child labour” from their west African cocoa suppliers. It was a project that companies agreed to complete in four years.

A young boy from Burkina Faso follows other children as they leave the cocoa farm where they work (Salwan Georges)

To succeed, the companies would have to overcome the powerful economic forces that draw children into hard labour in one of the world’s poorest places. And they would have to develop a certification system to assure consumers that a bag of M&M’s or a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup did not originate with the swinging of a machete by a boy like Abou. Since then, however, the chocolate industry also has scaled back its ambitions. While the original promise called for the eradication of child labour in west African cocoa fields and set a deadline for 2005, next year’s goal calls only for its reduction by 70 per cent.

Timothy McCoy, vice president of the World Cocoa Foundation, a Washington-based trade group, said that when the industry signed onto the 2001 agreement, “the real magnitude of child labour in the cocoa supply chain and how to address the phenomenon were poorly understood”. Industry officials emphasised that, according to the pledge made to lawmakers, west African governments and labour organisations also bear some responsibility for the eradication of child labour.

Today, McCoy says the companies “have made major strides”, including building schools, supporting agricultural cooperatives and advising farmers on better production methods. In statements, some of the world’s biggest chocolate companies that signed the agreement – Hershey, Mars and Nestlé – say they have taken steps to reduce their reliance on child labour. Other companies that were not signatories, such as Mondelez and Godiva, have also taken such steps, but likewise could not guarantee that any of their products were free of child labour.

In all, the industry, which collects an estimated £80.9bn in sales annually, has spent more than £117.9m over 18 years to address the issue. But when the businesses initially made the promise to eradicate child labour, according to industry insiders and documents, the companies had little idea of how to do so. Their subsequent efforts have been stalled by indecision and insufficient financial commitment, according to industry critics.

£117.9m

The amount of money the cocoa industry spends on addressing child labour, compared to the £80.9bn industry

Their most prominent effort – buying cocoa that has been “certified” for ethical business practices by third party groups such as Fairtrade and Rainforest Alliance – has been weakened by a lack of rigorous enforcement of child labour rules. Typically, the third party inspectors are required to visit fewer than 10 per cent of cocoa farms.

“The companies have always done just enough so that if there was any media attention, they could say, ‘Hey guys, this is what we’re doing,’” says Antonie Fountain, managing director of the Voice Network, an umbrella group seeking to end child labour in the cocoa industry. “It’s always been too little, too late. It still is.”

Men unload bags of cocoa near the office of Cargill, one of the leading cocoa suppliers for the chocolate industry (Salwan Georges)

We haven’t eradicated child labour because no one has been forced to,” Fountain adds. “What has been the consequence ... for not meeting the goals? How many fines did they face? How many prison sentences? None. There has been zero consequence.”

According to the US Labour Department, a majority of the 2 million child labourers in the cocoa industry are living on their parents’ farms, doing the type of dangerous work – swinging machetes, carrying heavy loads, spraying pesticides – that international authorities consider the “worst forms of child labour”. A smaller number, those trafficked from nearby countries, find themselves in the most dire situations.

I admit that it is a kind of slavery. They are still kids and they have the right to be educated today. But they bring them here to work, and it’s the boss who takes the money

A farmer who watches over child labourers on his farm 

During a March trip through Ivory Coast’s cocoa-growing areas, we spoke with 12 children who said they had come, unaccompanied by parents, from Burkina Faso to work on cocoa farms. While the ages they gave were consistent with their appearance, The Post could not verify their birth dates. In much of Burkina Faso, as many as 40 per cent of births go unrecorded in official records, and many children lack identification documents.

The farms were easily visited because they typically lack fences, but people were often reluctant to talk about child labour, which is known to be illegal and is officially discouraged. Asked about the extent of child migrants working on Ivorian cocoa farms, the farmer overseeing Abou and the other boys noted the steady stream of buses carrying people from Burkina Faso into the area. The Post’s reporters also observed those buses during the March visit.

There’s “a lot of them coming”, says the farmer, who asked that his name not be used because he didn’t want to attract attention from the authorities. “It’s them who do the work.” The farmer says he was paying the boy’s “gran patron”, the “big boss” who manages the boys, a little less than £7 per child for a week of work and who would, in turn, pay each of the boys about half of that.

The farmer says he considers the boys’ treatment unfair but hired them because he needed the help. The low price for cocoa makes life difficult for everyone, he says. “I admit that it is a kind of slavery,” the farmer says. “They are still kids and they have the right to be educated today. But they bring them here to work, and it’s the boss who takes the money.”

What makes the eradication of child labour such a daunting task is that, by most accounts, its roots lie in poverty. The typical Ivorian cocoa farm is small – less than 10 acres – and the farmer’s annual household income stands at about £1,494, according to research for Fairtrade, one of the groups that issues a label that is supposed to ensure ethical business methods. That amount is well below levels the World Bank defines as poverty for a typical family.

About 60 per cent of the country’s rural population lacks access to electricity, and, according to Unesco, the literacy rate of the Ivory Coast reaches about 44 per cent. With such low wages, Ivorian parents often can’t afford the costs of sending their children to school – and they use them on the farm instead.

Karim Bakary, 16, from Burkina Faso, photographed inside a hut out in the woods near the cocoa farm where he works and sometimes takes shelter in with other children (Salwan Georges)

Other labourers come from the steady stream of child migrants who are brought to Ivory Coast by people other than their parents. At least 16,000 children, and perhaps many more, are forced to work on west African cocoa farms by people other than their parents, according to estimates from a 2018 survey led by a Tulane University researcher.

“There is evidence that it happens, and it happens on a large scale,” says Elke de Buhr, an assistant professor and principal investigator on the study, done in collaboration with the Walk Free Foundation, a group working to end forced labour and funded by the Stichting de Chocolonely Foundation. The child migrants arrive amid a vast wave of people entering from Burkina Faso and Mali. Ivory Coast is home to 1.3 million migrants from Burkina Faso and another 360,000 from Mali, according to the United Nations. Mali, Burkina Faso and Ivory Coast share an agreement on open borders.

Upon arriving in Ivory Coast’s cocoa-growing areas, child migrants are used to meet the demand on cocoa farms for arduous manual labour and stay year-round. There is land to be cleared, typically with machetes; sprayings of pesticide; and more machete work to gather and split open the cocoa pods. Finally, the work involves carrying sacks of cocoa that may weigh 100lbs or more.

Côte d’Ivoire has long been seen as a land of better opportunity in this part of the world,” McCoy, the industry spokesman, says. “That particular sort of form of trafficking speaks to a broader phenomenon that is not specific to cocoa, is not specific to Côte d’Ivoire, but speaks of people seeking opportunity and that happens all over the world.”

We suffer a lot to get some money there. We came here to be able to have some money to eat. One time, though, I was able to send £27 some money back home 

 Karim Bakary, 16, a cocoa farm worker 

From the Ivorian capital of Abidjan, the village of Bonon is a five-hour drive along two-lane roads pocked with pond-sized potholes. From the outskirts of the village, footpaths lead into the surrounding forests, where farmers have created groves of cocoa trees. In a patch of woods one day in March, another group of boys is at work with machetes. Each says he has come from Burkina Faso to work on Ivory Coast’s cocoa farms.

Like teen boys elsewhere, the boys near Bonon – Abou Ouedrago, 15; Karim Bakary, 16; and Aboudnamune Ouedrago, 13 – wear colourful branded sportswear. But they sleep in huts out in the woods, spend their days doing hard manual labour and don’t attend school or see their families. Karim’s yellow Adidas shirt was smeared with dirt. When one of the boys falls ill, they say they pool their money to go to the pharmacy.

During a break in the typical March day – where the temperature ran into the 90s – the boys share water scooped into a bucket from a nearby pond. It is milky white. They say they came in search of a better life and are paid about 85 cents a day.

Children on a break from work at a cocoa farm share white-coloured water that was scooped into a bucket from a nearby pond (Salwan Georges)

“There is no money in Burkina,” says Karim, who says he arrived here four years ago when he was 12. “We suffer a lot to get some money there. We came here to be able to have some money to eat.” One time, he says proudly, he was able to send some money back home: £27. He says he would like to stay in Ivory Coast to make more money.

The most sombre of the three is Aboudnamune. He wears a Spider-Man ball cap and rarely smiles. He says he arrived two years ago when he was 11. He answers questions haltingly, sometimes staring into the distance, and says he’d like to see his parents because “it’s been a while”. “Yes, it’s a little bit hard,” he says of his life on the cocoa farms. “We are hungry, and we make just a small amount of money.”

A 2009 Tulane survey, based on interviews with 600 former migrant cocoa workers, offered a grim look at the economics that lead to child trafficking. Traffickers typically offer the children, who could be as young as 10, money or more specific incentives, such as bicycles, to take the bus to Ivory Coast. About half of those interviewed said they were not free to return home, and more than two-thirds said they experienced physical violence or threats. Most had been looking for work, and some said the money they were promised was never paid.

The man who is managing the boys for the owner of the farm, who declines to give his name, offers his perspective. “Their parents abandoned them,” he says. “They come here to make a living.” Then, apparently concerned about the attention the interview was drawing from passersby, he asks The Post’s journalists to leave the farm.

The most prominent, sustained public attention to the issue arose 18 years ago with reports from news organisations and the US State Department that linked American chocolate to child slavery in west Africa. “There is a moral responsibility ... for us not to allow slavery, child slavery, in the 21st century,” Eliot Engel, representative for New York’s 16th congressional district, said at the time.

Engel introduced legislation that would have created a federal labelling system to indicate whether child slaves had been used in growing and harvesting cocoa. It allocated £196,700 to the Food and Drug Administration to develop the labels. The measure passed the House, but the industry was adamant that no government regulation was necessary.

“We don’t need legislation to deal with the problem,” Susan Smith, then a spokeswoman for the Chocolate Manufacturers Association, told a reporter at the time. “We are already acting.” Engel, along with then Senator Tom Harkin, for Iowa, opted to negotiate an agreement with the chocolate companies.

Now known as the Harkin-Engel Protocol, the deal kept federal regulators from policing the chocolate supply. But the deal committed the chocolate companies to eradicate child labour from their supply chains and to develop and implement “standards of public certification”, which would indicate that cocoa products had been produced “without any of the worst forms of child labour”.

A worker stands on dried cocoa beans outside an Ivory Coast cooperative facility. About two-thirds of the world’s cocoa supply comes from west Africa (Salwan Georges)

The top officials of Hershey, Mars, Nestlé USA and five other chocolate companies signed onto the deal. The signing companies had “primary responsibility” for eradicating child labour, lawmakers said, but the Ivorian government, labour organisations and a consumer group also pledged support. The protocol also specified a deadline: July 2005.

Over the next few years, the industry approached the challenge with working groups, pilot programmes and attempts to redefine its promise. The industry created the International Cocoa Initiative, which was supposed to coordinate company efforts. The companies also formed a short-lived panel called the Verification Working Group. In west Africa, the industry supported pilot projects for monitoring child labour.

Even some insiders say the early efforts were destined to fall short. Peter McAllister, who led the International Cocoa Initiative from 2003 to 2010, says the companies were “desperate” to avoid the legislation and promised more than they could deliver. “Was there any chance of child labour being eradicated by 2005? No, never,” McAllister says. “They set themselves up for a bit of a disaster because of this magic date. One executive told me at that point, ‘We would have signed a nuclear non-proliferation treaty.’”

Still, the industry gave the impression it was making progress. In February 2005, Smith, of the Chocolate Manufacturers Association, told an NPR interviewer that the deadline would be met. “We have met every deadline established in the protocol agreement, and we’ll continue to do so,” she said. “We have large-scale tests of the monitoring system and the independent verification system in place. Those are going on now.”

July 2005

The original agreed deadline for cocoa industries to eradicate child labour

But as Engel and others pointed out at the time, the companies were not close to meeting the deadline four months away. There were no consumer labels in the works; there was no clear verification system; the worst forms of child labour had not been eradicated. Shortly after the deadline passed, the industry sought to reconstrue the meaning of a key clause in the agreement. In 2007, industry officials argued that the promised “standards of public certification” did not mean, as some negotiators had thought, the creation of consumer labels indicating that a chocolate bar was free of child labour.

“Everyone in that room negotiating understood we were there to create a labelling requirement,” J William Goold, Harkin’s lead negotiator on the deal, says when we interview him. “We were talking about consumer labels on chocolate. Anybody who thinks the language in Harkin-Engel means anything other than labelling for consumers is engaged in cynical self-delusion.”

Mars reports buying about half of its cocoa from certified sources; Hershey reports 80 per cent. In exchange for meeting the groups’ ethical standards, farmers are paid as much as 10 per cent more for their cocoa

Instead, the industry says, the agreement meant that the companies would produce statistics on west African “labour conditions” and “the levels” of child labour in west Africa. In 2011, a decade after signing the deal, industry officials also suggested that it had committed the companies to an impossible task.

“The industry in fact does not know of any [certification] system that currently, or in the near term, can guarantee the absence of child labour, including trafficked labour, in the production of cocoa in west Africa,” according to a 2011 letter from an industry group representing Hershey, Mars, Nestlé and other companies, to researchers working on a study funded by the US Labor Department. “There was – and is – no roadmap to implement the protocol,” the letter said. The “industry has in good faith carried out that agreement, while acknowledging several setbacks.”

Pisteurs, like this one here, are the middle men who collect bags of cocoa and deliver them to large commodities that supply the chocolate industry, such as Cargill (Salwan Georges)

As the industry struggled to come up with its own system for monitoring child labour, it increasingly turned to third parties to tackle the problem. Three nonprofit groups – Fairtrade, Utz and Rainforest Alliance – provide labels to products that have been produced according to their ethical standards, which include a prohibition on child labour.

Over the past decade, the chocolate companies have pledged to buy increasing amounts of cocoa certified by one of these three groups. Mars reports buying about half of its cocoa from certified sources; Hershey reports 80 per cent. In exchange for meeting the groups’ ethical standards, farmers are paid as much as 10 per cent more for their cocoa.

Yet some of the companies acknowledge that such certifications have been inadequate to the child labour challenge. The farm inspections are so sporadic, and so easily evaded, that even some chocolate companies that have used the labels acknowledge they do not eradicate child labour. Inspections for the labels are typically announced in advance and are required of fewer than one in 10 farms annually, according to the groups.

“Put simply, when the [certification] auditors came, the children were ushered from the fields and when interviewed, the farmers denied they were ever there,” according to a 2017 Nestlé report. “Certification isn’t enough,” John Ament, Mars’s global vice president for cocoa, told Reuters in September. Or, as an industry group representing Mars and Hershey put it, in a 2011 letter to researchers: “Given the absence of farm level monitoring, none of the three major “product certifiers” have claimed to offer a guarantee with respect to labour practices.”

Representatives of the certifying groups acknowledge that their labels are imperfect tools for the eradication of child labour and that they are improving their methods. “Child labour in the cocoa industry will continue to be a struggle as long as we continue to pay farmers a fraction of the cost of sustainable production. Fairtrade isn’t a perfect solution,” says Bryan Lew, chief operating officer for Fairtrade America. But, he says, the higher prices for certified cocoa and the group’s efforts to organise farmer cooperatives are steps towards alleviating its root cause: poverty.

While most major chocolate companies seek to buy at least some “certified” cocoa, Hershey has pursued certification more than others. Hershey “will source 100 per cent certified cocoa for its global chocolate product lines by 2020 and accelerate its programmes to help eliminate child labour in the cocoa regions of west Africa,” the company announced in a 2012 news release.

Leigh Horner, Hershey’s vice president of corporate communications and sustainability, says the company’s efforts are not reliant on the certifications alone. It views them instead “as one of many tools and strategies that need to be deployed ... Without the support of the local governments, these various efforts won’t work.”

A worker cuts a cocoa pod to collect the beans (Salwan Georges)

One day this March, Amadou Sawadogo, 18, was preparing a patch of forest for a cocoa farm near the village of Blolequin, by the Liberian border. He says he has been living in Burkina Faso and, when he was 16, came to Ivory Coast after “my father ... asked [me] to come and look for money here.”

Like others here, he says it was common for Burkinabe children to come with traffickers to work in Ivory Coast and that the financial arrangements are well-known. There are about 30 young Burkinabes working around Blolequin, he says. Payments from the traffickers to parents depend on a child’s age. For a 15-year-old, he says, parents are paid about £196. Once on the Ivorian farms, the boys make a little bit of money, typically less than £1 per day, Sawadogo says. None of this is legal under Ivorian law.

Ivory Coast signed the Harkin-Engel deal, too, and passed laws in 2010 and 2016 that define child labour and set penalties for its use. The Ivory Coast government committee handling child labour issues also says that it has taken other preventive measures: it has built schools in rural areas and is cracking down on people involved in child trafficking.

Child labour and child trafficking have flourished nonetheless because of the country’s inability to enforce the laws. As US State Department officials noted in a 2018 report, the primary police anti-trafficking unit is based in the nation’s capital, Abidjan, several hours away from the cocoa-growing areas, and its budget is about £3,900 a year.

 The cocoa sector has sought relatively little evidence relating to child slavery; there has been a general lack of sufficient attention to the problem

That amount, a State Department report says, is “severely inadequate”. In a statement to The Post, Ivory Coast’s committee against child trafficking and child labour says the £3,900 per year was not sufficient, and that “the Ivorian government has to invest more in this area”. The country has also faced the eruption of on-and-off civil wars in 2002 and 2011.

Making matters more complex, some of the young migrant workers, legally the victims of child labour, say they’d like to stay. Though he arrived only two years ago, Sawadogo says he is prepared to stay in Ivory Coast and has started clearing his own patch of forest for a cocoa farm. On his plot of land, Sawadogo has built a small shelter out of branches. It is big enough for one person to sleep in. He owns a couple of battered metal bowls and has some oil, which he’ll use to fry picked bananas for lunch. “I haven’t earned much money yet,” he says. “But here I’ve made a little money.”

After missing the 2010 deadline, the industry established a less ambitious goal – to get a 70 per cent reduction in child labour – and to do so by 2020. That goal, too, is unlikely to be met, the industry has indicated, and there is still no plan for consumer labels.

Over the years since striking the deal with the chocolate industry, Harkin and Engel have issued statements that sometimes supported the industry’s evolving approach and other times laid out their hopes for more improvement. Engel, now chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, says policymakers have worked closely with the industry to make progress. “The cocoa industry now makes serious investments in addressing child labour. We still have more work to do when it comes to this challenge,” he says.

Children from impoverished Burkina Faso take a break from work on a cocoa farm near Bonon, Ivory Coast (Salwan Georges)

Engel says the Foreign Affairs Committee is working on legislation to address child labour and supply chain issues, and will likely hold a hearing later this year focused on the matter. Harkin did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

The problem, in part, according to some industry consultants, is that the companies have not done enough to fully investigate the depth of the problem. The cocoa sector has sought “relatively little evidence relating to child slavery,” according to a report by Embode, a human rights agency, for Mondelez, a US company that includes several chocolate brands, including Cadbury and Toblerone. There has been a “general lack ... of sufficient attention” to the problem, the report stated.

In the last major survey to measure progress against the Harkin-Engel goals, a 2015 report for the US Labour Department found that, based on interviews with about 12,000 people, the number of child labourers reported to have worked in west Africa the previous year had increased to 2.1 million from 1.8 million in the previous survey, completed in 2009.

Some experts note, what might be the most straightforward means of addressing child labour is scarcely mentioned: paying the farmers more for their cocoa. More money would give farmers enough to pay for their children’s school expenses; alleviating their poverty would make them less desperate

McCoy, of the World Cocoa Foundation, says the results are “in many ways ... disappointing”, especially given years of work on the issue. He did note some positive signs – of the Ivorian children working in cocoa, the percentage attending school has risen to 71 per cent, up from 59 per cent. And, he notes, the companies have another programme to combat child labour, one that now covers more than 200,000 west African farms.

The new system relies on hiring a local farmer to check other farms for child labour. If children are found working, the farmer is encouraged to send the children to school, and he or she is offered other assistance. The advantage, advocates say, is that the oversight comes from someone more like a social worker than a police officer.

In pilot programmes, the new monitoring system reduced child labour by 30 per cent over three years, but it’s still not clear how willing the companies are to extend the programme to their entire cocoa supply. It can cost about £55 annually per farmer. “If child labour is a priority, this is commercially sustainable,” says Nick Weatherill, executive director of the International Cocoa Initiative, which is developing the system.

Meanwhile, some experts note, what might be the most straightforward means of addressing child labour is scarcely mentioned: paying the farmers more for their cocoa. More money would give farmers enough to pay for their children’s school expenses; alleviating their poverty would make them less desperate.

Under the Fairtrade programme, cocoa farmers receive an extra 10 per cent or more of prices, but that is not enough to lift the typical Ivorian farmer out of poverty. One small Dutch company, Tony’s Chocolonely, is paying an even bigger premium – about 40 per cent more, in an attempt to provide a living wage. For a metric ton of cocoa beans that would normally fetch £1,022, Tony’s pays an extra £408, or about £1,430.

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Asked how likely it might be for other companies to follow suit, Paul Schoenmakers, a Tony’s company executive, notes that many of the large chocolate brands may fear giving their competitors a price advantage by paying more. Schoenmakers says their premium cocoa price adds less than 10 per cent to the cost of a typical chocolate bar.

“There’s no economic textbook or management book that thinks that [paying more] is a good idea,” he says. The industry spokesman, McCoy, says he views the Tony’s Chocolonely effort as an experiment. “Tony’s sources 7,000 tons of cocoa, which is a tiny amount ... How scalable is that approach?” McCoy asks. “I think it’s an open question.” But to Schoenmakers, it’s a simple matter. “Nobody needs chocolate,” he says. “It’s a gift to yourself or someone else. We think it’s absolute madness that for a gift that no one really needs, so many people suffer.”

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