Quote (Arsenic_Touch @ Feb 11 2020 01:29pm)
Nestle... ugh. That's one company that needs to be broken up. Not surprised that they're trying to put a stop to legislation that would further showcase their abuses.
Nestle is not opposed to curtailing slavery. Nestle does not want to staff entire teams dedicated to understanding the new law, teams to draw up processes and paperwork to enforce the new law, and teams to monitor and report on potential violations by businesses that they do not directly control.
In addition, they're no doubt leery about the potential PR, legal, and financial implications if they commit an incidental oversight or an infraction is committed somewhere down the supply chain that they have no realistic means of catching.
This is similar to regulations on AML. Most people recognize that AML is a far more prevalent and necessary evil to catch, so businesses are forced to bear the cost of implementation.
Nestle is likely to complain about any legislation that increases overhead, but the question to Australia is whether this is the least onerous and most effective way of combating slavery.
This post was edited by bogie160 on Feb 11 2020 01:21pm