homeeconomy NewsA sweet deal? Study shows higher cocoa prices could end child labour in Ghana

A sweet deal? Study shows higher cocoa prices could end child labour in Ghana

Paying just 3 percent more at the farm gate could stop children in Ghana doing the most hazardous tasks, like using machetes, or working more than 42 hours a week, researchers said, as the illegal practice is driven by poverty and rarely prosecuted.

By Reuters Jun 6, 2019 5:34:19 PM IST (Updated)


Ghana could end child labour on cocoa farms by increasing the prices it pays impoverished farmers by about 50 percent, a US study said on Wednesday, as global efforts to end child labour stall.
Paying just 3 percent more at the farm gate could stop children in Ghana doing the most hazardous tasks, like using machetes, or working more than 42 hours a week, researchers said, as the illegal practice is driven by poverty and rarely prosecuted.
“We figured there has to be some kind of incentive, on top of the laws, to get the farmers to stop using child labour,” said Jeff Luckstead, an agricultural economist at the University of Arkansas, co-author of the study in the journal PLoS ONE.