Kolb highlighted recent efforts on the part of some of the world’s largest agribusiness. Historically, the mass commodity market for coffee has been concerned with profit to exclusion of other considerations like fair labor and earth care. No longer the exclusive terrain of government initiatives, social policies, or small niche markets, efforts to bring about economic gender equality are now becoming essential in large scale private sector business because they have real outcomes on productivity and profit.
Nestlé, the largest coffee trader in the world, has invested in training women in agriculture best practices and in business and leadership skills with the aim of having women in at least one third of leadership positions in the Kenyan regional coffee cooperatives. Svetlana Obruchkova, Managing Director of Nestlé Kenya points out that, “Women do more than two thirds of the work involved in coffee farming in Kenya. However, fewer than 5% of leadership roles in coffee cooperatives in the country are currently held by women.”
In Indonesia and Vietnam IFC works with ECOM, the second largest coffee trader, on Farmer Training Centers (FTCs). “The FTCs help farmers improve coffee productivity and quality, reduce costs and obtain internationally recognized certification for sustainable production.”
The real economic impact? According to IFC, “Around 4,000 farmers from Vietnam who obtained the certifications have increased their total income by about $6.6 million, and about 6,000 farmers from Indonesia experienced total increased incomes of about $3.8 million.”
At a more personal level, those income increases change the lives of the women farmers and their families. That money buys shoes and pays school fees for the children, gives women access to technology that connects them to a global marketplace, and adds to the purchasing power that feeds the community.
Because of the predominance of women already in the coffee supply chain, could coffee lead the move towards gender equity and economic equality? The industry is in the early days of making such a monumental move. If the market demands it, how will the private sector respond to accommodate equal pay and value chain culture shifts?