27/05/2026
The moment businesses realise compliance isn’t enough…
There’s a moment when the room goes quiet.
It happens when a leader realises that reporting can be polished while people still get hurt. Many companies are working hard on statements, supplier questionnaires, and training completion rates. Yet modern slavery thrives in gaps between what we say and what we check.
Our TFH insider view is this.
‘Compliance can shape intent, yet it rarely shifts power on its own. Real change shows up when companies make decisions that protect people, even when it costs time or money.’
Globally, 50 million people were estimated to be living in modern slavery in 2021. That number tells us the problem is bigger than disclosure.
In Australia, debate has grown about whether reporting-only models drive enough change, with ongoing calls for stronger accountability.
👉 Put one human rights metric into a leader’s performance goals. Make it about outcomes, such as worker voice coverage in high-risk categories.
👉 Fund one deeper supplier partnership in a high-risk area. Longer contracts, stable forecasting, and shared training can reduce pressure that pushes exploitation underground.
If you want to be the leader people trust, go past the minimum and build proof in the way you buy, hire, and respond. Save this, share it with a values-led leader, and your thoughts to this discussion: what would “enough” look like in your business this year? If you want to talk through a practical next step, DM us.