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IFC Against AIDS Protecting People and Profitability
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Why IFC Takes AIDS Seriously A priority for the development community 95% of people infected live in developing countries Most companies not aware of risks Companies don’t know where to start An integral part of IFC’s commitment to sustainable development
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Reputation risk Financial impact Threat to company’s viability The Business Case
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The Reputation Risk
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AIDS: Impact On Bottom Line Medical and other benefits costs Absenteeism and lower productivity Labor turnover, recruitment and training costs Experienced personnel Enabling environment Shrinking markets
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The Business Case Benefits vs. Costs Boston University AIDS impact assessment on six corporations in South Africa and Botswana. Six industries: mining, metals processing, utilities, agribusiness, retail, and media. Findings: The annual "AIDS tax" on business was as much as 5.9% of the corporations' labor costs. Workplace AIDS programs would reduce this “AIDS tax” by as much as 40.4%. All six companies would have earned positive returns on their investments if they had provided antiretroviral drugs at no cost to HIV- positive employees. Source: Harvard Business Review, February 2003
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The Business Case Benefits vs. Costs A University of California-San Francisco study on large Ugandan companies (500+ employees) found that even programs offering the most expensive HIV treatment — anti-retroviral care — can be cost-effective especially in light of 85% price reductions offered by drug manufacturers for sub-Saharan Africa. Source: UCSF electronic newsletter Daybreak, 7/14/2000 A study of 16 large firms (average 1,200-1,500 employees in each firm) in Kenya estimated that the AIDS impact could be 3-8% of total labor costs by 2005 and 4% of profits. Source: AmfAR - Treatment Insider Newsletter, January 2003
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The Business Case Benefits vs. Costs Most firms pay funeral costs such as coffins, transport of the body and a number of mourners, and 6-12 months payment of death gratuity. One sugar company in Uganda estimates this cost to total US$500 per employee. Source:Nabalonzi et al. 1995 Chilanga, Zambia’s largest cement factory saw a 15-fold increase in funeral-related absenteeism between 1992 and 1995. As a result, the company has restricted employee absenteeism for funerals to only those for a spouse, parent or child. Source: Bloom et al. 2001
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SMEs Viability A study of 209 small businesses in South Africa identified HIV/AIDS as one of the three main factors that cause nearly 80% of South African start-up SMEs to fail every year (the other two factors are crime and inadequate management expertise) Source: S. Eeden et al. – 2001
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When to contact IFC Against AIDS The company relies on a workforce separated from their families for long periods of time Mining, construction, shipping, trucking, and other industries employing migrant labor Employees’ salaries tend to be higher than in the surrounding community The sector can be a target for activists Extractive industries, companies with a strong brand name, companies sensitive on their “license to operate” The company relies on key jobs/individuals The loss of one of those key individuals can prove catastrophic Large workforce The magnitude of direct and indirect costs will be stronger
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IFC Against AIDS Awareness Guidance Training Financing Goal: Accelerate the involvement of private sector, and especially of IFC clients worldwide, in the fight against AIDS
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“It is inevitable that a firm doing business in the developing world will pay for AIDS. It is just a question of when and how much.” Lee Smith Former President, Levi Strauss International
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