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Briefing

11 Oct 2017

First Year of FTSE 100 Reports under the UK Modern Slavery Act: Towards Elimination?

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Briefing        Registry     Press Release      Methodology

The International Labour Organization estimates that illicit profits from modern slavery reach $150 billion a year. In 2016, 16 million people were victims of forced labour in the private economy. Companies are exposed to modern slavery risks through their own operations and through complex supply chains where manufacturing, sourcing, financing and hiring are outsourced. Risks are particularly high further down the supply chain.

The UK Modern Slavery Act (the Act) recognises that every large company has these risks, and requires all companies with an annual turnover of at least £36 million and operating in the UK to report on the action they are taking to ensure modern slavery does not take place in their operations and supply chains. The UK government suggests companies cover six reporting areas in their reports: organizational and supply chain structure, company policies, due diligence processes, risk assessments, effectiveness of measures in place and training (the reporting areas).

This report assesses the action reported by the FTSE 100, the UK’s largest listed companies. Findings show there is a welcome cluster of leading companies taking robust action, such as Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury (J) and Unilever, while the majority show a lacklustre response to the Act at best.

Since producing the report, we have recieved updates and clarifications from some companies. These are detailed below.

Read the report

Key recommendations 

Companies should:

  • Ensure corporate executives prioritise modern slavery as part of the strategic agenda of the company and support all departments implementing relevant policies and strategies
  • Collaborate with their peers to investigate modern slavery risks common supply chains through deep-dive research, and share insights to help develop best practice.
  • Raise awareness among their suppliers of modern slavery risks and require them to conduct due diligence in their operations and supply chains.

Investors should:

Engage with companies on their actions to tackle modern slavery and reward companies that demonstrate due diligence to avoid slavery and provide remedy. More information is available in CORE Coalition’s briefing, Engaging with Companies on Modern Slavery – A Briefing for Investors.

UK Government should

  • Improve the monitoring and enforcement mechanisms to ensure companies that are required to report under the Act feel pressure to comply and are penalised if they fail to do so.
  • Publish a list of the companies required to produce statements under the Act and support open, free, and accessible information regarding company compliance;
  • Provide clear incentives for corporate action: bids for public contracts should be dependent on companies demonstrating due diligence in their operations and their modern slavery statements.

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Company updates

Compass plc and British Land Company have clarified that their modern slavery statements have been approved by the Board and included this explicitly in their statement. They now meet our assessment of the minimum requirements.

Reckitt Benckiser has provided a statement to clarify their statement has been approved by the Board. They now meet our assessment of the minimum requirements.

Pearson plc has provided a statement to clarify its disclosure and approach to combatting modern slavery.

BP plc has provided the following statement, "BP’s 2016 slavery and human trafficking statement was approved by the Board of BP plc and its relevant subsidiaries and we therefore consider it meets the requirement of the Act. The statement was approved by the Board of BP plc on 17th June 2017."

Ferguson plc has provided the following statement, "Ferguson plc confirms that the company’s Modern Slavery Act statement has been approved by the Board and signed by a director as part of the Strategic Report in the company’s Annual Report.  The approval and director’s signature have since also been added to the Modern Slavery Act statement on its website.  Ferguson plc now meets the BHRRC’s assessment of the minimum requirements."