Global Compact Rejects Independent Panel's Criticism
26-03-2011 - Isolda Agazzi
GENEVA, Mar 26, 2011 (IPS) - An independent U.N. body has criticised the Global Compact, the largest initiative for corporate social responsibility, for not sufficiently monitoring the human rights and environmental commitments of participating companies.
The
Joint Inspection Unit (JIU), an independent external evaluation body of
the U.N., based in Geneva, echoes a longstanding complaint by NGOs that
the Global Compact may just be helping companies don a positive
marketing image.
"On the whole, the Global Compact has been successful in legitimating
the progressive and generalised engagement of the United Nations with
the private sector, and promoting new partnerships whose effectiveness
is yet to be proved. However, it has been less successful in making
business participants translate their commitment into real policy
change," the JIU says bluntly in a report.
Though the report was published at the beginning of the year, the JIU
only drew public attention to it last week, by issuing a press release.
The Global Compact reacted with a harsh statement, dated Mar. 24, that
rejects the report as "flawed and inaccurate" and asks for corrections.
However, the intricacies of U.N. policies and the ping pong between
Geneva and New York will remain a mystery since Papa Louis Fall, the
main author of the report, is apparently not allowed to talk to the
press.
The Global Compact is the largest initiative for corporate social
responsibility. It was launched by former U.N. secretary general Kofi
Annan in 1999 at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
Businesses that adhere to this compact commit themselves to ten
principles relating to human rights, environmental and labour standards
and anti-corruption practices. In exchange, they can make use of the
U.N. Global Compact logo with a blue globe and a laurel wreath, which is
very similar to the U.N. logo.
The world body's independent inspectors see a threat to the credibility
of the United Nations if any company can use its logo simply by
subscribing to the Compact. It points to the Alliance for a
Corporate-Free U.N., an NGO initiative that has long criticised the
international organisation for "blue washing" companies that use its
logo just for marketing purposes.
"It is curious that the report makes reference to that coalition, which
ended its activities about five years ago, and not to the more recent
articles and reports published on our blog," Bart Slob, senior
researcher at SOMO, told IPS.
SOMO is a Dutch-based NGO that monitors companies and does research on
supply chains. In 2007 it funded Global Compact Critics, an informal
network of organisations and people with concerns about the U.N. Global
Compact.
"The general views of the authors that contribute to our blog correspond
to the ones of the JIU," he ensures.
The Global Compact is intended to exhort business to "learn and
dialogue", but it has become victim of its own success: in ten years, it
has gathered 7,450 participants from 135 countries -- mainly
businesses, but also NGOs, business organisations and academia. Large
companies make up 35 percent of the total and small and medium
enterprises another third.
By region, the largest representation is in Europe (43 percent), with
U.S. companies making up only 5 percent of the total, Middle East ones 2
percent, Asian 20 percent, Latin American 24 percent and African 6
percent.
But if quantity has steadily increased, quality is lagging behind. The
report suggested more stringent criteria for admission. Presently, the
CEO of a company only needs to sign a letter pledging to make the ten
principles an integral part of its business strategy, without having to
give sufficient guarantees that it will spread them throughout its
supply chain and subsidiaries.
"The lack of company monitoring is the initiative's Achilles' heel,"
stresses the report. NGOs like Amnesty International, Greenpeace,
ActionAid and the Berne Declaration have long criticised the initiative
for lacking teeth, but companies have always resisted any form of
monitoring. Companies self-assess themselves and their reports are
allegedly not verified.
The Global Compact rejects this criticism by pointing out that it has
excluded more than 2,000 enterprises that did not meet the criteria.
But for the inspectors this is not enough. "There is an absence of
adequate entry criteria and of an effective monitoring system and the
voluntary nature of the commitments is not a guarantee of future good
behaviour," they write.
Bart Slob agrees with this point and with the criticism of the
governance structure: "There are many business representatives on the
Compact's Board, but there is very little space for NGOs and U.N. member
states," he notes.
"I am very pleased with this report because it confirms what civil
society has been saying since the beginning: lack of clarity, lack of
teeth, lack of follow-up proceedings," Andreas Missbach, joint managing
director of the Berne Declaration, told IPS.
The Berne Declaration is a Swiss NGO that co-organises the Public Eye on
Davos, an annual award attributed to the least responsible enterprise.
It does not participate in the Global Compact arguing that it "does not
have any effect in the real world, since nobody is policing the
companies if they don't abide to their commitments. I have looked at the
reports of UBS and Credit Suisse, they are extremely poor," he added.
He points to Barrick Gold Corporation, a mining company that is a member
of the Compact "despite having constantly run into human rights and
environment problems, like in Papua New Guinea".
So, should the Global Compact be reformed or does it have to be closed
down?
"There are mixed views on that," Bart Slob replied. "If the U.N. is
unwilling to take rigorous reform measures, it would be better to
consider an alternative course of action, like establishing a code of
conduct for large companies, like it was suggested by the U.N. in the
1970s. An idea that unfortunately never materialised."
Source: IPSnews
| Website: | http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=55013 |
|---|












