Nestlé has faced criticism for its supply chain practices, particularly regarding child labor in cocoa production. The company has been accused of relying on cocoa sourced from regions where child labor is prevalent, often due to economic hardship and lack of education. While Nestlé has committed to ethical sourcing and initiatives to combat child labor, challenges remain in effectively monitoring and enforcing these practices across complex supply chains. The issue highlights broader systemic problems in agriculture and economic inequality.
Yes... Abercrombie & Fitch does use child labor.
According to Starbucks' website and their Global Human Rights Statement, they follow child labor laws to the T and thus do not use child labor.
No. A peacock is a bird. A bird does no work. Therefore, they don't use child labor.
US companies do not use child labor illegally. Family businesses use their children legally.
No, Cuba doesn't use child labor.
It depends on the country where they use child labor, and what kind of rules the country has about it. If the laws don't let you use child labor then the company is using children illegally.
no
no
The use of child labor is for the owner of a child labor place is to under pay the children because they don't know better and then the owner gets more profit then they pay the children
The puppy likes to nestle with me.
None in the USA or Britain or Canada. ^ LIAR! There are lots of chocolate companies that use slave labor. Such as Nestle, Hersheys, and Mars. Though companies are starting to notice slave labor, they might be fine in 2025.
yes