Wednesday, December 2, 2020

Recipe for reform: Smallholders hold the key to productivity in Sri Lanka’s tea industry

With nearly 500,000 smallholders in total, the tea smallholder sector is a sig­nificant contributor to the production and output of Ceylon Tea in Sri Lanka, and across the globe. We are often called the ‘back­bone’ of our tea indus­try and with good reason.

16% of Sri Lanka’s arable land belongs to the tea sector. Of this, tea small­holders operate in 60% of the total tea land and account for more than 70% of the total tea produced. According to the Tea Con­trol Act, tea lands between 20 perches and 10 acres are considered Tea Small Holdings across the country.

I am a tea smallholder myself. My journey began in 1977 with a 2-acre tea land. I now operate three small tea lands while simultaneously serving as the Chairman of the Sri Lanka Federation of Tea Smallholders. Running a smallholding over the past three decades (or more) has not been an easy feat.

No matter how big or small your tea plot is, ensur­ing that the land is well managed, tea is correctly harvested, and the quality of Ceylon Tea is upheld are challenging standards to meet every day.

Currently, a great deal is being made about the tea industry and tea companies being in hot water over con­cerns on wages, productivi­ty, output, and quality. As such, we felt it was important to share lessons from a tea smallholder perspective to help refine best practices and discover the sustainable way forward.

It is essential that the industry - as a collective – ensures a paradigm shift in the way we’ve been managing this sector. While it is true that the industry was introduced by the Brit­ish in 1867, the challenges we face today are totally dif­ferent from then, and there is no reason as to why our management practices should not evolve with the times.

Basic industry dynam­ics

Tea smallholder planta­tions are found commonly across the island. Most low-country tea comes from plantations in Ratnapura, Galle, Matara and Kalutara. Mid-country smallholdings are widespread across, Keg­alle and Kandy. Up-Country tea comes from Nuwara Eliya and Uva.

A majority of tea small­holders are both managers and harvesters of their lands. Small tea plots are easy to manage, and if you own one, you and your family will likely tend to it. The larger the tea plot, the more decen­tralised management becomes - quite similar to the basics of how the much larger tea companies func­tion. However, unlike the big tea companies - widely known as Regional Planta­tion Companies (RPCs) - smallholders are not bound by a ‘Collective Agree­ment’ when it comes to the matter of worker com­pensation. Sri Lanka’s Industrial Disputes Act of 1950 defines the ‘Col­lective Agreement’ as an agreement relating to the terms and condition of employment of workmen in any industry. Within the tea industry, this agreement mainly focuses on worker remuneration and is renego­tiated every two years.

With wage negotiations approaching early next year, industry actors across the board seem to be at cross-roads on the best way for­ward. The only point on which there seems to be much agreement is that reform is needed and urgent­ly. This is a battle fought every two years, and unfor­tunately, there are no win­ners; only losers. By con­trast, smallholders like us who are not bound by such an agreement have the inde­pendence to make decisions we feel are best for our workers, the industry and the legacy of Ceylon Tea.

While we use the Collec­tive Agreement as a bench­mark for the rate of pay­ment, we have one crucial advantage, which is that we have the freedom to decide on the model of payment. For us, the Collective Agree­ment is only a guideline. Our main focus is therefore in ensuring that we can offer workers a method of payment that is attractive while remaining sustain­able as a business.

Lesson from tea small­holders

Here’s how we work: As a baseline, tea har­vesters are paid a rate of Rs. 30 for every kilo they har­vest.

Some harvesters pluck up to an average of 30 kgs on a good day. A good day is when the weather, the soil and harvesting practices are all in our favour. Leaves on each tea bush are harvested on rotation every 7-10 days. This means that leaves from each bush are plucked at least three times a month. A tea plot needs more than just the expertise of tea harvest­ers to yield a successful out­put. Besides tea harvesters, we also have other field­workers who engage in man­ual labour oriented tasks like weeding, manuring and up-keeping estate infrastructure who are paid a daily wage of Rs. 1000. These fieldwork­ers work 8 hours a day.

As illustrated above, for tea harvesters, our method of payment is far from an unrewarding, fixed daily wage model. Instead, each harvester is paid for the kilos of tea they yield – which is to say: a productiv­ity linked model of remuner­ation.

Until the 2000s, like the RPCs, tea smallholders also paid harvesters and tea workers a daily wage. However, we found that this became a real challenge when trying to retain work­ers and maintain profitabili­ty, and so a collective deci­sion was taken by tea small­holders to shift towards a productivity-linked wage, as we saw this to be far more efficient and effective for the industry. Speaking from direct personal experience, the ability to remunerate tea harvesters based on output has been liberating for them and myself.

While this has helped me manage my tea lands better and yield higher output, it has also given me the time to venture into other areas of work I am passionate about.

For instance, I was able to pursue my passion for setting up the National Pre-School Development Foundation; this foundation aims to train pre-school teachers in Early Childhood Development within plantation communi­ties. For tea harvesters, mov­ing out of a daily payment system has opened up a path for them to secure higher earnings while increasing mobility of labour – mean­ing that workers were freed up to actively pursue work on different smallhold­er plots to boost their earnings even fur­ther.

Over the past few years, tea harvesters who work on smallholder plots has evolved into entrepreneurs themselves.

Driven by the need to improve efficiency and output, harvesters them­selves have become ‘agents of change’. Management and production practices have become smarter, out­put-oriented and have result­ed in improvements in the quality of the tea leaf itself.

A recent study by the International Labour Organi­sation confirms these obser­vations which I have person­ally witnessed over the years as a smallholder, namely: that casual worker engaged in tea smallholdings usually earn a higher daily wage compared to the plantation workers and contribute towards more productive work (Future of work for Tea Smallholders in Sri Lanka, ILO, 2018). This is simply since the people we contract to work on our plots are paid solely based on their produc­tivity.

Over the years, although the tea smallholder sector has evolved to suit the times, it is unfortunate that the rest of the industry has been held back from progress by forcing the continuation of a basic wage system that does not prioritize or sufficiently reward productivity. RPCs continue to play an impor­tant role in our industry – particularly in terms of upholding the international image and reputation of Ceylon Tea through their commit­ments to securing interna­tional standards and certifi­cations.

Hence the RPCs must be able to contin­ue operations in a sustaina­ble manner. A collapse in the RPC sector would create major risks to the entire industry’s reputation for the highest quality standards and it’s capacity for innovation – given that more recent advancements in mechaniza­tion, climate-friendly facto­ries, use of drone technology and IT to optimize produc­tion and supply chain have only been made possible due to their investments.

Such advancements can only be scaled down to provide ben­efits to tea smallholders once a path to implementa­tion has been cleared by RPCs. Failure to facilitate this progress will ultimately jeopardize the sustainability of the entire industry.

Moreover, the first and most pressing solution to this dilemma is obvious to all parties. The wage model must be revised. Our experi­ence as tea smallholders is clear proof of this fact and should not be

We are all advocates of our tea, and what hurts one sector of our industry will ultimately impact all of us. A paradigm shift is necessary, and it can only start with a long-over­due update to how workers are paid.

Author:

0 comments: