Child Labour.

160 million children.

Could your due diligence be missing something?

160 million children are equivalent to:

48% of the population of the United States

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8x the population of London

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1,777x the capacity of Wembley Stadium

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48% of the population of the United States 〰️ 8x the population of London 〰️ 1,777x the capacity of Wembley Stadium 〰️

Definitions

Data

HACE specialises in addressing all forms of Child Labour within global supply chains.

How does Child Labour fit alongside Forced Labour and Modern Slavery?

When efforts are focused solely on Forced Labour and Modern Slavery in contexts of legislation, Governance, data collection and reporting, 156.7 million children in Child Labour are left unprotected, including 79 million children in Hazardous Working Conditions.

Recent research by HACE, analysing 458 country-commodity combinations, found that in 72.7% of cases, Child Labour risks exist independently of Forced Labour. This means that many companies and investors may have exposure without realising it.

“A child means every human being below the age of eighteen years unless under the law applicable to the child, majority is attained earlier” - UN Convention on the Rights of the Child

“Worst Forms of Child Labour” As defined by Article 3, ILO Convention 182 - Worst Forms of Child Labour, 1999

SOURCES: All data are estimates, taken from the International Labour Organization via “Child Labour: Global Estimates 2020, Trends and the Road Forward” and “Global Estimates of Modern Slavery: Forced Labour and Forced Marriage, 2022”

Distribution of Goods proven to be produced with Child Labour within Supply Chains

There are 151 Goods proven to be produced with Child Labour in global supply chains. No company with a supply chain is immune from this risk. 

Child Labour typically occurs in deeper tiers of the supply chain, making it harder to detect; but it is not limited to only specific commodities or geographies. It is not often found in traditional auditing processes, as they rarely extend beyond Tier 1 suppliers.

For example, 112 million children grow and harvest global Raw Agricultural Crops such as Cotton, Rubber, Tea, Palm Oil and Vanilla.

Goods linked to Child Labour are distributed throughout all stages and sectors of all supply chains.