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New analysis from Walk Free and Fair Supply estimates nearly AU$100 billion worth of imports to Australia are at heightened risk of modern slavery.
This represents around $1 in every $5 spent on imported goods in 2024 alone.
The most money was spent on electronic machinery and appliances, with nearly $13 billion dollars of imports deemed high risk.
Nearly 90 per cent of apparel and clothing imports come from countries with forced labour risks.
Many other everyday goods, including phones, computers, footwear and vehicle parts, are also at risk of being manufactured using exploited workers.
The latest Global Slavery Index estimates nearly two-thirds of forced labour cases worldwide are tied to global supply chains.
This new analysis reveals Australian businesses and consumers are purchasing goods linked to supply chains where forced labour is prevalent, from apparel manufacturing in South Asia to electronics production in East and Southeast Asia.
With Australians unknowingly spending their hard-earned wages on goods linked to forced labour, the need for stronger legislation is urgent.
It’s very difficult for consumers to trace or influence these supply chain risks.
Without stronger regulation, businesses face no requirement to identify, reduce, or report these risks in a meaningful or consistent way.
Australia’s Modern Slavery Act was world-leading when introduced, but evidence over the last 8 years shows mandatory reporting alone has done little to reduce harm for victims.
Most companies are still not identifying specific risks within their supply chains, and even fewer are taking concrete steps to address forced labour.
Australia must move quickly to strengthen its response to forced labour by:
Strengthening the Act will make it harder for goods made with forced labour to enter Australia and help protect the millions of people trapped in exploitation around the world.
Australia’s households should not have to shoulder the hidden cost of forced labour. Our government and businesses must act now.
Fair Supply’s analysis found more than a fifth of Australia’s imports (21.5 per cent), were from commodity categories with an elevated risk of modern slavery.
This includes electronics, telecommunications equipment, apparel, cars, office equipment, footwear, textiles, and miscellaneous goods such as artificial flowers and seasonal items.
Read the full analysis of Australia’s trade exposure to modern slavery.
Fair Supply’s data draws on the US Department of Labor’s List of Goods Produced by Forced or Child Labour, US Customs and Border Protection Withhold Release Orders, Fair Supply’s Industry Ratings, and 2024 import data from the Australian Bureau of Statistic’s Merchandise Imports by Commodity (SITC), Country and State dataset.