Why Is the CEO of the Global Anti-Poverty Group CARE Joining the Board of Coca-Cola? | Civil Eats

Why Is the CEO of the Global Anti-Poverty Group CARE Joining the Board of Coca-Cola?

In its continuing frenzy to silence potential critics, Coca-Cola issued a press release recently that announced the following:

Helene D. Gayle, M.D., M.P.H., has been nominated to stand for election to the Company’s Board of Directors at its Annual Meeting of Shareowners in April.Dr. Gayle, 57, is President and CEO of CARE USA, a leading international humanitarian organization whose poverty fighting programs reached approximately 122 million people last year in 84 countries.

Why in the world would Dr. Gayle want to sit on the Coca-Cola Board of Directors when Coca-Cola’s export of non-nutritious, sugary drinks to the world’s poorest countries is causing a new set of chronic health problems for those living in poverty — including obesity, heart disease, diabetes and dental caries (cavities)? The U.S. is already dealing with the phenomenon of food insecure families suffering from obesity, thanks in good part to overconsumption of cheap soft drinks that are heavily marketed in our poorest communities.

Surely Dr. Gayle must have seen this startling statistic: For each additional sugary drink a child consumes per day, his or her risk of obesity increases by an astonishing 60 percent.* That applies to children living in poverty as well.

When it comes to understanding curious corporate partnerships, you need to follow the money. Not surprisingly, Coca-Cola is listed as a “key partner” on the CARE website. Here is CARE’s description of their corporate partners:

CARE’s corporate partners demonstrate their commitment to finding victories over poverty through their generous support of CARE. Through annual contributions of funds or services, CARE’s corporate partners help bring hope and opportunity to families and communities around the world. CARE is grateful for their support.

And also not surprising — a Coca-Cola executive sits on the CARE board — Alex Cummings, Executive Vice President and Chief Administrative Officer of the Coca-Cola Company.

From her bio on the CARE website, we learn more details about Dr. Gayle, a well-educated medical doctor and Master of Public Health, who runs this respected global anti-poverty organization:

She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the American Public Health Association, the Institute of Medicine and the American Academy of Pediatrics. Dr. Gayle currently serves on the President’s Commission on White House Fellowships and the U.S. Department of State’s Foreign Affairs Policy Board.

newsmatch 2023 banner - donate to support civil eats

Three of the organizations that Dr. Gayle cites above, the American Public Health Association, the Institute of Medicine and the American Academy of Pediatrics have spoken out forcefully about their concerns with the overconsumption of soft drinks and their contribution to obesity and related chronic disease. Yet, this doesn’t seem to have made an impact on Dr. Gayle.

Muhtar Kent, Chairman and CEO of The Coca-Cola Company says this about Dr. Gayle:

“Helene brings a global mindset and a deep understanding of health and humanitarian issues to our Company. Her expertise and insight will be invaluable as we continue to expand our global initiatives around sustainability and women.”

I suspect Mr. Kent wants Dr. Gayle on the Coca-Cola Board for a number of reasons. When companies like Coca-Cola donate money to high-profile non-profits like CARE and form cozy relationships with their leaders, they do so because they want their brands associated with something charitable. Coca-Cola’s association with CARE gives it positive press, particularly in emerging markets, and helps create a positive public perception about the brand, which can lead to increased sales.

Coca-Cola has other reasons for aligning itself with one of the world’s top anti-poverty organizations. Just this week, Coca-Cola was one of the world’s ten food giants named and criticized in Oxfam’s “Behind the Brand” report. Oxfam’s goal with “Behind the Brand” is “to provide people who buy and enjoy these products with the information they need to hold the Big Ten to account for what happens in their supply chains.” The ten corporations were graded on treatment of workers, farmers, women, land and water, around the world. They were also graded on their treatment of the climate, and overall transparency.

Coca-Cola was cited for particularly poor performance on land rights and support for farmers. On women, climate, transparency and water it was given a grade of “Some Progress” (which falls below grades of “Fair” and “Good.”) And Coca-Cola received a grade of “Fair” on workers. No doubt Coca-Cola hopes that having CARE’s Dr. Gayle on its Board of Directors helps burnish its reputation on sustainability and treatment of the world’s poorest citizens — while it aggressively introduces and markets Coca-Cola’s non-nutritious drinks into more and more impoverished countries and communities around the globe.

We’ll bring the news to you.

Get the weekly Civil Eats newsletter, delivered to your inbox.

In Michael Moss’ New York Times Magazine article“The Extraordinary Science of Addictive Junk Food”, he quotes a former Coca-Cola executive, Jeffrey Dunn, who feels remorse for the time he spent in Brazil, pushing increased consumption of Coke among the many Brazilians living in poverty. According to Dunn, the company’s strategy was to offer Coke in more affordable 6.7-ounce bottles, at 20 cents each. On one trip, as he walked through an impoverished community, he had an epiphany:

“A voice in my head says, ‘These people need a lot of things, but they don’t need a Coke.’ I almost threw up.”

Dr. Gayle, the last thing the impoverished people you work with need, is a Coke. By accepting Coca-Cola’s funding and serving on their Board of Directors, you are helping to healthwash Coke’s brands and expand sales of sugary, non-nutritious drinks to the very people you want to help. Please, do the right thing and withdrawal your nomination to serve on Coca-Cola’s Board. And please work to ensure that CARE no longer accepts funding from the Coca-Cola company. You and CARE are complicit in helping Coca-Cola market their unhealthy drinks to the very people who need them the least.

Nancy Huehnergarth is president of Nancy F. Huehnergarth Consulting, which specializes in nutrition and physical activity advocacy and policy change.  She regularly posts to her blog and writes frequently for numerous publications on food reform.  Read more >

Like the story?
Join the conversation.

  1. Awesome write up... Thanks for shedding the light.

More from

Nutrition

Featured

Volunteers from DTE Energy pack prepackaged boxes for delivery to churches and homebound seniors at Focus: HOPE, a local agency located in Detroit, Michigan that operates the Commodity Supplemental Food Program (CSFP) in a client choice model so that participants can select the foods they want. (Photo credit: Preston Keres, USDA)

The Government Spends Billions on Food. Who Benefits?

In this week’s Field Report: A push to improve federal food purchasing heats up, the first food-focused COP kicks off, dust storms accelerate, and new evidence suggests that fair-trade certifications are failing to protect farmworkers.

Popular

With Season 2, ‘High on the Hog’ Deepens the Story of the Nation’s Black Food Traditions

Stephen Satterfield and Jessica B. Harris watching the sunset at the beach, in a still from Netflix's High on the Hog Season 2. (Photo courtesy of Netflix)

Building a Case for Investment in Regenerative Agriculture on Indigenous Farms

Jess Brewer gathers livestock at Brewer Ranch on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation. (Photo courtesy of Intertribal Agriculture Council, www.indianag.org)

Walmart and EDF Forged an Unlikely Partnership. 17 Years Later, What’s Changed?

Aerial view of cargo containers, semi trailers, industrial warehouse, storage building and loading docks, renewable energy plants, Bavaria, Germany

Relocalizing the Food System to Fight a ‘Farm-Free Future’