This metric covers one of the requirements under PF indicator 1.2 of the Poverty Footprint Tool* concerned with livelihoods, which refers to the ability of people living in poverty to meet essential needs for themselves and their family, i.e., adequate food, housing, clothing, and healthcare, in the context of supporting and protecting their rights. Beyond earnings, it refers to the opportunity for individuals to pursue options for personal development, upward mobility, career development, and security.
This indicator, furthermore, falls under the 1st Corporate area Dimension, value chains, which refers to how a company’s value chain and its procurement, manufacturing, and distribution policies and/or practices influence the ability of people living in poverty to access good-quality employment, earn a living wage or sustain a business, and participate in the market.
For project partners who have set out to research this indicator, the Poverty Footprint guideline suggests the following methodology:
survey workers, and audits
consider using secondary research to identify topics such as:
legal minimum wages and benefits entitlement to workers in the country of study
wage benchmarks (poverty thresholds, industry average, national average income, etc.)
commodity prices (as per market prices)
average household sizes (important to consider in living wage calculations)
existing living wage calculations
However, Wikirate researchers may review one of the following company statements using search terms like "wages", "salary", "worker pay" and "average wage" to determine whether the company in question publicly discloses the ratio of female worker wage in comparison to the average minimum wage:
Poverty Footprint
Corporate Social Responsibility Report
Annual Report
CSO Statements or Reports
Investigative Reports, Surveys, Articles, etc.
Please provide the following contextual information in a comment to the metric value:
any additional disclosure regarding wages, e.g. policy statements, the average number of hours, etc.
whether the disclosed ratio extends to the entire value chain
the page number of the report where this information can be found