{"id":12812,"date":"2021-08-05T10:01:32","date_gmt":"2021-08-05T08:01:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/resources\/\/resources\/fairfood.nl\/resources\/?p=12812"},"modified":"2023-02-15T16:40:26","modified_gmt":"2023-02-15T15:40:26","slug":"the-future-of-living-wages-and-living-incomes-an-align-series","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/fairfood.org\/en\/resources\/the-future-of-living-wages-and-living-incomes-an-align-series\/","title":{"rendered":"The future of living wages and living incomes: An ALIGN series"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
You may know <\/em>ALIGN<\/em><\/a> as a guidance tool to help you achieve living wages and incomes in your agri-food supply chain. Making such a contemporary tool a reality required a deep digging into the past and anticipation towards the future. And that journey for us has been nothing but an eye-opener. With such amazing insights at hand, we are beginning a new blog series with facts, ideas and thoughts that shapes up the past, present and future of living wages and incomes<\/a>! Now, are you ready to join this exciting journey?<\/em> In this final instalment of the series, we will talk about what needs to change for a better future – a resilient food supply chain post-COVID, policies that favour migrant workers and using technology to shape a transparent value chain.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n This is the final instalment of a three blog series. Read the first chapter here<\/a> and the second chapter here<\/a>.<\/em><\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n From a mere ideology in Ancient Greece to research that studies the concept distinctively, from objections in factories to campaigns that shook the world, from defiance of Keynesian theorists to modern-day neo-liberals; the concept of a living wage and income has gone through years of struggle to prove its righteousness in this world. <\/p>\n\n\n\n While recessions, world wars and industrial slavery became top-notch reasons to implement living wages and incomes in this capitalist world, the year 2020 brought in another catastrophe to vindicate a fair wage; the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in an employment crunch that is 10 times worse than the 2008 Financial Crisis, with devastating repercussions for the food sector.[1]<\/sup><\/a> The crisis brought out the realities of disrupted food supply chains, increasing hunger and malnutrition and more importantly the suffrage that farmers and their families around the world live through.<\/p>\n\n\n\n COVID-19: A wake-up call for living wages and incomes<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n It\u2019s no exaggeration to say that COVID-19 has been a seismic event in the lives of every actor in a food supply chain. But it is also an unerring fact that the repercussions have been the worst for the less-wealthy in the chain. <\/p>\n\n\n\n For farmers in low, middle and high-income countries alike, the pandemic has translated to poverty, the inability to feed families and sometimes even suicides.[2]<\/sup><\/a>,[3]<\/sup><\/a><\/sup> For instance, in India, where more than 50 percent of the population is employed in the agriculture sector, the government has abysmally failed to protect the workforce with an increase in prices of fuel, fertilizers and insecticides even amid the pandemic. In early June, the government also used its executive powers to push the privatization of agriculture with false promises that farmers will get greater freedom<\/a> to sell their produce outside large agricultural markets taxed by state governments. But very soon these farmers realised that it only created a monopoly for corporate buyers rather than empowering them. The lockdown has also robbed side jobs from most of the farmers, and all of it together resulted in crippling debt and abuse of land.[4]<\/sup><\/a> The situation is no better in the world’s superpower nation and largest exporting force, the USA. Money is tight and more food is wasted than ever as farmers are no longer able to send their produce to processors due to lockdowns. Another result of the crisis you may not have seen coming: a lot of farmers also experience PTSD from having to kill off so many of their animals.[5]<\/sup><\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n