Question: Has the company reviewed business KPIs to ensure they are not increasing risk of modern slavery? (E.g. expansion to production countries that have a lot of migrant workers)
Answer:
No
17646448
Walk Free
2022
Verified by Steward check_circle

On page 44 the report states

 

Each year we report publicly on our supplier’s annual top audit nonconformances, and each month we report KPIs

to the Sustainability Office on topics such as violations and nonconformances from our supplier audits, signed conformance letters, closure rate for corrective action plans, and quarter-on-quarter risk indicators within our supply chain. NXP monitors improvement by measuring the number of priority violations, repeat audits, frequency of nonconformances, and the nonconformance closure rate"

 

Page 59 refers to how NXP identifies its high risk suppliers - "We annually conduct a supplier risk assessment to determine our audit schedule for highrisk suppliers. Risk is calculated according to three scoring categories – country, product, and spend risks – which assigns a risk factor as either

Claire Summerer.....2024-02-18 01:03:24 UTC

This question is on "*business (not modern slavery)* performance indicators" which typically cause modern slavery risks.

I didn't find mentioning such business conducts, KPIs even less. It's a 78 pages document, maybe I missed it.

 

What I found closest to what we seek:

 

"When making business decisions, we endeavor to consider the views of our stakeholders, by acknowledging their viewpoints

and demonstrating respect for our shared priorities. We believe this approach reflects our commitment to transparency and

accountability, and ultimately contributes to long-term value. Throughout the year, we engage formally and informally with our

stakeholders to explore labor and human-rights issues, along with trends and developments relevant to our industry" (p.32)

 

"Our Auditable Standards on Social Responsibility and

tools are developed with input from external stakeholders

and are updated on a regular basis to reflect the latest

recommendations and regulations on responsible

business conduct. " (p.40)

 

In the end I'd say "No".

Sebastian Jekutsch.....2024-02-22 07:27:29 UTC

This statement is indeed quite vague and would not meet the criteria for this indicator, as it doesn't provide any details of the KPIs (or business practices) modified as a result of modern slavery risks.

Aureliane.....2024-04-05 09:03:45 UTC