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International · 3 hrs ago
72← Left
Global supply chains keep workers poor: three case studies show how the cycle can be broken
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Quality 72/100
Partisan intensity 62/100
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← Left ✓ Fair headline

The article examines how global supply chains perpetuate worker poverty across sectors like agriculture and tourism, and discusses the International Labour Organisation's 2024 endorsement of living wage principles as a potential solution.

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Global supply chains keep workers poor: three case studies show how the cycle can be broken
Globally, about one in five people in jobs live in poverty. A key reason lies in how global supply chains are organised. From agriculture to tourism, many jobs are embedded in systems that keep wages low, even as they generate value for international markets. This has brought renewed urgency to the living wage debate. In 2024, the International Labour Organisation (ILO) formally endorsed general principles for defining and calculating living wages across different national contexts, including gu
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