Fair trade is an organized social
movement whose stated goal is to help producers in developing countries achieve better trading
conditions and to promote sustainability. Members of the movement advocate the
payment of higher prices to exporters, as well as higher social and
environmental standards. The movement focuses in particular on commodities, or
products which are typically exported from developing countries to developed
countries, but also consumed in domestic markets (e.g. Brazil and India)
most notably handicrafts, coffee, cocoa,
sugar,
tea, bananas, honey, cotton, wine, fresh fruit, chocolate, flowers, and gold. The movement
seeks to promote greater equity in international trading partnerships through
dialogue, transparency and respect. It promotes sustainable development by
offering better trading conditions to, and securing the rights of, marginalized
producers and workers in developing countries.
Fairtrade labeling organizations
most commonly use a definition of fair trade developed by FINE, an informal
association of four international fair trade networks (Fairtrade Labelling
Organizations International, World Fair Trade Organization (WFTO),
Network of European Worldshops and European Fair Trade Association
(EFTA)): fair trade is a trading partnership, based on dialogue, transparency,
and respect, that seeks greater equity in international trade. Fair trade
organizations, backed by consumers, are engaged actively in supporting
producers, awareness raising, and in campaigning for changes in the rules and practice
of conventional international trade.
There are several recognized
Fairtrade certifiers, including Fairtrade International (formerly called FLO/Fairtrade Labelling
Organizations International), IMO and Eco-Social. Additionally, Fair
Trade USA, formerly a licensing agency for the Fairtrade International
label, broke from the system and is implementing its own fair trade labelling
scheme, which has resulted in controversy due to its inclusion of independent
smallholders and estates for all crops. In 2008, Fairtrade
International certified approximately US$4.98 billion (€3.4B) of products.
The movement is especially popular
in the UK where there are 500 Fairtrade Towns, 118 Fairtrade universities, over
6,000 Fairtrade churches, and over 4,000 UK schools registered in the Fairtrade
Schools Scheme. In 2011, over 1.2 million farmers and workers in more than 60
countries participated in Fair Trade, and €65 million in Fairtrade premium was
paid. According to Fairtrade International, nearly six out of ten consumers
have seen the Fairtrade mark and almost nine in ten of them trust it.
The fair trade system
There are a large number of fair
trade and ethical marketing organizations often employing different marketing
strategies. Most Fair Trade products are sold by those Fair Trade organizations
that believe it is necessary to market through supermarkets to get sufficient
volume of trade to have any real impact on the Third World.
The Fairtrade brand is by far the
biggest of these fair trade coffee brands. Packers in developed countries pay a
fee to The Fairtrade Foundation for the right to use the brand and logo, and
nearly all the fee goes to marketing. Packers and retailers can charge as much
as they want for the coffee. The coffee has to come from a certified Fairtrade
cooperative, and there is a minimum price when the world market is
oversupplied. Additionally, the cooperatives are paid an additional 10c per lb
premium by buyers for community development projects. The cooperatives can, on
average, sell only a third of their output as Fairtrade, because of lack of
demand, and sell the rest at world prices. The exporting cooperative can spend
the money in several ways. Some go to meeting the costs of conformity and
certification: as they have to meet Fairtrade standards on all they produce,
they have to recover the costs from a small part of their turnover, sometimes
as little as 8%, and may not make any profit. Some meet other costs. Some is
spent on social projects such as building schools, clinics and baseball
pitches. Sometimes there is money left over for the farmers. The cooperatives
sometimes pay farmers a higher price than farmers do, sometimes less, but there
is no evidence on which is more common. In some cases the farmers certainly do
not get enough extra to cover their extra costs in conforming to Fairtrade
standards. There is little or no research on the extra costs incurred or the
extra revenue.
The marketing system for Fairtrade
and non-Fairtrade coffee is identical in the consuming countries, using mostly
the same importing, packing, distributing and retailing firms. Some independent
brands operate a virtual company, paying importers, packers and distributors
and advertising agencies to handle their brand, for cost reasons. In the
producing country Fairtrade is marketed only by Fairtrade cooperatives, while
other coffee is marketed by Fairtrade cooperatives (as uncertified coffee), by
other cooperatives and by ordinary traders.
To become certified Fairtrade
producers, the primary cooperative and its member farmers must operate to
certain political standards, imposed from Europe. FLO-CERT, the for-profit
side, handles producer certification, inspecting and certifying producer
organizations in more than 50 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. In
the Fair trade debate there are many complaints of
failure to enforce these standards, with producers, cooperatives, importers and
packers profiting by evading them.
There remain many Fair Trade
organizations that adhere to a greater or smaller degree to the original
objectives of Fair Trade, and that market products through alternative channels
where possible, and market through specialist Fair Trade shops, but they have a
small proportion of the total market.
General structure of the
movement
Most fair trade import
organizations are members of, or certified by one of several national or
international federations. These federations coordinate, promote, and
facilitate the work of fair trade organizations. The following are some of the
largest:
- The FLO International (Fairtrade International), created in 1997, is an association of three producer networks and twenty national labeling initiatives that develop Fairtrade standards, license buyers/label usage and market the Fair trade Certification Mark in consuming countries. The Fairtrade International labeling system is the largest and most widely recognized standard setting and certification body for labeled Fair trade. Formerly named Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International, it changed its name to Fairtrade International in 2009, when its producer certification and standard setting activities were separated into two separate, but connected entities. FLO-CERT, the for-profit side, handles producer certification, inspecting and certifying producer organizations in more than 50 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.Fairtrade International, the non-profit arm, oversees standards development and licensing organization activity. Only products from certain developing countries are eligible for certification, and for some products such as coffee and cocoa, certification is restricted to cooperatives. Cooperatives and large estates with hired labor may be certified for bananas, tea and other crops.
- Fair Trade USA is an independent, nonprofit organization that sets standards, certifies, and labels products that promote sustainable livelihoods for farmers and workers and protect the environment. Founded in 1998, Fair Trade USA currently partners with around 800 brands, as well as 1.3 million farmers and workers across the globe.
- World Fair Trade Organization (formerly the International Fair Trade Association) is a global association created in 1989 of fair trade producer cooperatives and associations, export marketing companies, importers, retailers, national, and regional fair trade networks and fair trade support organizations. In 2004 WFTO launched the FTO Mark which identifies registered fair trade organizations (as opposed to the FLO system, which labels products).
- The Network of European Worldshops (NEWS!), created in 1994, is the umbrella network of 15 national worldshop associations in 13 different countries all over Europe.
- The European Fair Trade Association (EFTA), created in 1990, is a network of European alternative trading organizations which import products from some 400 economically disadvantaged producer groups in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. EFTA's goal is to promote fair trade and to make fair trade importing more efficient and effective. The organization also publishes yearly various publications on the evolution of the fair trade market. EFTA currently has eleven members in nine different countries.
In 1998, the first four
federations listed above joined together as FINE, an informal
association whose goal is to harmonize fair trade standards and guidelines,
increase the quality and efficiency of fair trade monitoring systems, and
advocate fair trade politically.
- Additional certifiers include IMO (Fair for Life, Social and Fair Trade labels), Eco-Social and Fair Trade USA.
- The Fair Trade Federation (FTF), created in 1994, is an association of Canadian and American fair trade wholesalers, importers, and retailers. The organization links its members to fair trade producer groups while acting as a clearinghouse for information on fair trade and providing resources and networking opportunities to its members. Members self-certify adherence to defined fair trade principles for 100% of their purchasing/business. Those who sell products certifiable by Fairtrade International must be 100% certified by FI to join FTF.
Student groups have also been
increasingly active in the past years promoting fair trade products. Although
hundreds of independent student organizations are active worldwide, most groups
in North America are either affiliated with United Students for Fair Trade
(USA, the Canadian Student Fair Trade Network (Canada), or Fair Trade Campaigns (USA), which
also houses Fair
Trade Universities and Fair Trade Schools.
The involvement of church
organizations has been and continues to be an integral part of the Fair Trade
movement:
- Ten Thousand Villages is affiliated with the Mennonite Central Committee
- SERRV is partnered with Catholic Relief Services and Lutheran World Relief
- Village Markets is a Lutheran Fair Trade organization connecting mission sites around the world with churches in the United States
- Catholic Relief Services has their own Fair Trade mission in CRS Fair Trade
History
The first attempts to
commercialize fair trade goods in Northern markets were initiated in the 1940s
and 1950s by religious groups and various politically oriented non-governmental organizations
(NGOs). Ten Thousand Villages, an NGO within the Mennonite Central Committee (MCC) and SERRV International were the first, in 1946 and
1949 respectively, to develop fair trade supply chains in developing countries.
The products, almost exclusively handicrafts ranging from jute goods to cross-stitch
work, were mostly sold in churches or fairs. The goods themselves had often no
other function than to indicate that a donation had been made.
Solidarity trade
The current fair trade movement
was shaped in Europe in the 1960s. Fair trade during that period was often seen
as a political gesture against neo-imperialism: radical student movements began
targeting multinational corporations and concerns that traditional business
models were fundamentally flawed started to emerge. The slogan at the time,
"Trade not Aid", gained international recognition in 1968 when it was
adopted by the United Nations
Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) to put the emphasis on the
establishment of fair trade relations with the developing world.
The year 1965 saw the creation of
the first Alternative Trading Organization
(ATO): that year, British NGO Oxfam launched "Helping-by-Selling", a program which
sold imported handicrafts in Oxfam stores in the UK and from mail-order
catalogues.
By 1968, the oversized newsprint
publication, the Whole Earth Catalog, was connecting thousands
of specialized merchants, artisans, and scientists directly with consumers who
were interested in supporting independent producers, with the goal of bypassing
corporate retail and department stores. The Whole Earth Catalog sought to
balance the international free market by allowing direct purchasing of goods
produced primarily in the United States and Canada, but also in Central and
South America.
In 1969, the first worldshop
opened its doors in the Netherlands. The initiative aimed at bringing the
principles of fair trade to the retail sector by selling almost exclusively
goods produced under fair trade terms in "underdeveloped regions".
The first shop was run by volunteers and was so successful that dozens of
similar shops soon went into business in the Benelux
countries, Germany, and other Western European countries.
Throughout the 1960s and 1970s,
important segments of the fair trade movement worked to find markets for
products from countries that were excluded from the mainstream trading channels
for political reasons. Thousands of volunteers sold coffee from Angola and
Nicaragua in worldshops, in the back of churches, from their homes, and from
stands in public places, using the products as a vehicle to deliver their
message: give disadvantaged producers in developing countries a fair chance on
the world’s market.
Handicrafts vs. agricultural
goods
In the early 1980s, Alternative Trading Organizations
faced major challenges: the novelty of some fair trade products began to wear
off, demand reached a plateau, and some handicrafts began to look "tired
and old fashioned" in the marketplace. The decline of segments of the
handicrafts market forced fair trade supporters to rethink their business model
and their goals. Moreover, several fair trade supporters during this period
were worried by the contemporary impact on small farmers of structural reforms
in the agricultural sector as well as the fall in commodity
prices. Many of them came to believe it was the movement's responsibility to
address the issue and remedies usable in the ongoing crisis in the industry.
In the subsequent years, fair
trade agricultural commodities played an important role in the growth of many
ATOs: successful on the market, they offered a much-needed, renewable source of
income for producers and provided Alternative Trading Organizations
a complement to the handicrafts market. The first fair trade agricultural
products were tea and coffee, quickly followed by: dried fruits, cocoa, sugar,
fruit juices, rice, spices and nuts. While in 1992, a sales value ratio of 80%
handcrafts to 20% agricultural goods was the norm, in 2002 handcrafts amounted
to 25.4% of fair trade sales while commodity food lines were up at 69.4%.
Rise of labeling initiatives
Early Fairtrade Certifications
Marks
Sales of fair trade products only
really took off with the arrival of the first Fairtrade certification initiatives.
Although buoyed by ever growing sales, fair trade had been generally contained
to relatively small worldshops scattered across Europe and to a lesser extent,
North America. Some felt that these shops were too disconnected from the rhythm
and the lifestyle of contemporary developed societies. The inconvenience of
going to them to buy only a product or two was too high even for the most
dedicated customers. The only way to increase sale opportunities was to start
offering fair trade products where consumers normally shop, in large
distribution channels. The problem was to find a way to expand distribution
without compromising consumer trust in fair trade products and in their
origins.
A solution was found in 1988, when
the first Fairtrade certification initiative, Max Havelaar, was created in the Netherlands
under the initiative of Nico Roozen, Frans Van Der Hoff, and Dutch development NGO Solidaridad.
The independent certification allowed the goods to be sold outside the
worldshops and into the mainstream, reaching a larger consumer segment and
boosting fair trade sales significantly. The labeling initiative also allowed customers and
distributors alike to track the origin of the goods to confirm that the
products were really benefiting the producers at the end of the supply
chain.
The concept caught on: in the
ensuing years, similar non-profit Fairtrade labelling organizations were set up
in other European countries and North America. In 1997, a process of
convergence among labelling organizations – or "LIs" (for
"Labeling Initiatives") – led to the creation of Fairtrade Labelling
Organizations International (FLO). FLO is an umbrella organization whose
mission is to set the Fairtrade standards, support, inspect and certify
disadvantaged producers, and harmonize the Fairtrade message across the
movement.
In 2002, FLO launched for the
first time an International Fairtrade
Certification Mark. The goals of the launch were to improve the visibility
of the Mark on supermarket shelves, facilitate cross border trade, and simplify
procedures for both producers and importers. At present, the certification mark
is used in over 50 countries and on dozens of different products, based on
FLO’s certification for coffee, tea, rice, bananas, mangoes, cocoa, cotton,
sugar, honey, fruit juices, nuts, fresh fruit, quinoa, herbs and spices, wine, footballs,
etc.
Product certification
Note: Customary spelling of
Fairtrade is one word when referring to the FLO product labeling system, see Fairtrade certification
Fairtrade labelling (usually
simply Fairtrade or Fair Trade Certified in the United
States) is a certification system designed to allow consumers to identify goods
which meet agreed standards. Overseen by a standard-setting body (FLO
International) and a certification body (FLO-CERT), the
system involves independent auditing of producers and traders to ensure the
agreed standards are met.
For a product to carry either the International Fairtrade
Certification Mark or the Fair Trade Certified Mark, it must come
from FLO-CERT inspected and certified producer organizations. The crops must be
grown and harvested in accordance with the international Fair trade standards
set by FLO International. The supply
chain must also have been monitored by FLO-CERT, to ensure the integrity of
the labelled product.
Fairtrade certification purports
to guarantee not only fair prices, but also the principles of ethical purchasing. These principles include
adherence to ILO agreements such as those banning child and slave
labour, guaranteeing a safe workplace and the right to unionise, adherence
to the United Nations charter of human
rights, a fair price that covers the cost of production and facilitates
social development, and protection and conservation of the environment. The
Fairtrade certification system also attempts to promote long-term business
relationships between buyers and sellers, crop prefinancing, and greater
transparency throughout the supply chain and more. These claims have been
challenged by critics,
The Fairtrade certification system
covers a growing range of products, including bananas, honey, coffee, oranges,
Cocoa bean|cocoa, cotton, dried and fresh fruits and vegetables, juices, nuts
and oil seeds, quinoa, rice, spices, sugar, tea, and wine. Companies offering
products that meet the Fairtrade standards may apply for licences to use one of
the Fairtrade Certification Marks for those products.
The International Fairtrade
Certification Mark was launched in 2002 by FLO, and replaced twelve Marks used
by various Fairtrade labelling initiatives. The new Certification Mark is
currently used worldwide (with the exception of the United States). The Fair Trade Certified Mark is still used
to identify Fairtrade goods in the United States.
There is widespread confusion
because the fair trade industry standards provided by Fairtrade International
(The Fairtrade Labelling Organization) use the word “producer” in many
different senses, often in the same specification document. Sometimes it refers
to farmers, sometimes to the primary cooperatives they belong to, to the
secondary cooperatives that the primary cooperatives belong to, or to the
tertiary cooperatives that the secondary cooperatives may belong to but “Producer [also] means any entity that has
been certified under the Fairtrade International Generic Fairtrade Standard for
Small Producer Organizations, Generic Fairtrade Standard for Hired Labour
Situations, or Generic Fairtrade Standard for Contract Production.”. The word
is used in all these meanings in key documents. In practice, when price and
credit are discussed, “producer” means the exporting organization, “For small
producers’ organizations, payment must be made directly to the certified small
producers’ organization”. and “In the case of a small producers’ organization
[e.g. for coffee], Fairtrade Minimum Prices are set at the level of the
Producer Organization, not at the level of individual producers (members of the
organization)” which means that the “producer” here is half way up the
marketing chain between the farmer and the consumer. The part of the standards
referring to cultivation, environment, pesticides and child labour has the
farmer as “producer”.
WFTO Fair Trade Organization
membership
In an effort to complement the
Fairtrade product certification system and allow most notably handcraft
producers to also sell their products outside worldshops, the World Fair Trade
Organization (WFTO) launched in 2004 a new Mark to identify fair trade
organizations (as opposed to products in the case of FLO International and
Fairtrade). Called the FTO Mark, it allows consumers to recognize registered
Fair Trade Organizations worldwide and guarantees that standards are being implemented regarding
working conditions, wages, child labour, and the environment. The FTO Mark gave
for the first time all Fair Trade Organizations (including handcrafts
producers) definable recognition amongst consumers, existing and new business
partners, governments, and donors.
Alternative trading
organizations
An alternative trading
organization (ATO) is usually a non-governmental organization (NGO) or
mission-driven business aligned with the Fair Trade movement, aiming "to
contribute to the alleviation of poverty in developing regions of the world by
establishing a system of trade that allows marginalized producers in developing
regions to gain access to developed markets".
Alternative trading organizations
have Fair Trade at the core of their mission and activities, using it as a
development tool to support disadvantaged producers and to reduce poverty, and
combine their marketing with awareness-raising and campaigning.
Alternative trading organizations
are often, but not always, based in political and religious groups, though
their secular purpose precludes sectarian identification and evangelical
activity. Philosophically, the grassroots political-action agenda of these
organizations associates them with progressive political causes active since
the 1960s: foremost, a belief in collective
action and commitment to moral principles based on social, economic and trade
justice.
According to EFTA, the defining
characteristic of alternative trading organizations is that of equal
partnership and respect - partnership between the developing region producers
and importers, shops, labelling organizations, and consumers. Alternative trade
"humanizes" the trade process - making the producer-consumer chain as
short as possible so that consumers become aware of the culture, identity, and
conditions in which producers live. All actors are committed to the principle
of alternative trade, the need for advocacy in their working relations and the
importance of awareness-raising and advocacy work.
Examples of such organisations are
Ten Thousand Villages, Equal
Exchange and SERRV International in the US and Equal Exchange Trading, Traidcraft,
Oxfam Trading, Twin
Trading and Alter Eco in Europe. (see
the Alternative Trading Organization
page for further examples).
Worldshops
Worldshops or fair trade shops are
specialized retail outlets offering and promoting fair trade products.
Worldshops also typically organize various educational fair trade activities
and play an active role in trade justice and other North-South political
campaigns.
Worldshops are often not-for-profit
organizations and run by locally based volunteer networks.
Although the movement emerged in
Europe and a vast majority of worldshops are still based on the continent,
worldshops can also be found today in North America, Australia and New Zealand.
Worldshops' aim is to make trade
as direct and fair with the trading partners as possible. Usually, this means a
producer in a developing country and consumers in industrialized
countries. The worldshops' target is to pay the producers a fair price that
guarantees substinence and guarantees positive social development. They often
cut out any intermediaries in the import chain.
A web movement has recently begun
to provide fair trade items at fair prices to the consumers. One popular one is
Fair Trade a Day where a different fair trade item is featured each day.
World wide
International
Every year the sales of Fair Trade
products grow close to 30% and in 2004 were worth over $500 million USD. In the
case of coffee, sales grow nearly 50% per year in certain countries. In 2002,
16 000 tons of Fairtrade coffee was purchased by consumers in 17 countries.
“Fair trade coffee is currently produced in 24 countries in Latin America,
Africa and Asia”. The 165 FLO associations in Latin America and Caribbean are
located in 14 countries and together export over 85% of the world’s Fair Trade
coffee. There is a North/South divide of fair trade products with producers in
the South and consumers in the North. Discrepancies in the perspectives of
these southern producers and northern consumers are often the source of ethical
dilemmas such as how the purchasing power of consumers may or may not promote
the development of southern countries.
Africa
Africa’s exports come from places
such as South Africa, Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya. These exports are
valued at $24 million USD. Between the years of 2004 and 2006 Africa quickly
expanded their number of FLO certified producer groups, rising from 78 to 171;
nearly half of which reside in Kenya, following closely behind are Tanzania and
South Africa. The FLO products Africa is known for are tea, cocoa, flowers and
wine. In Africa there are smallholder cooperatives and plantations which
produce Fair Trade certified tea. Cocoa-producing countries in West Africa
often form cooperatives that produce fair trade cocoa such as Kuapa Kokoo
in Ghana. West
African countries without strong fair trade industries are subject to
deterioration in cocoa quality as they compete with other countries for a
profit. These countries include Cameroon, Nigeria, and the Ivory Coast.
Latin America
Studies in the early 2000s show
that the income, education and health of coffee producers involved with Fair
Trade in Latin America were improved, versus producers who were not
participating. Brazil, Nicaragua, Peru and Guatemala, having the biggest
population of coffee producers, make use of some of the most substantial land
for coffee production in Latin America and do so by taking part in Fair Trade.
Countries in Latin America are also large exporters of fair trade bananas. The Dominican Republic is the largest producer of
fair trade bananas, followed by Mexico, Ecuador, and Costa Rica. Producers in the Dominican Republic have set
up associations rather than cooperatives so that individual farmers can each own
their own land but meet regularly.Fundación Solidaridad was created in Chile to increase the
earnings and social participation of handicraft producers. These goods are
marketed locally in Chile and internationally.
Asia
The Asia Fair Trade Forum aims to
increase the competency of fair trade organizations in Asia so they can be more
competitive in the global market. Garment factories in Asian countries
including China, Burma, and Bangladesh
consistently receive charges of human rights violations, including the use of
child labor. These violations conflict with the principles outlined by fair
trade certifiers. In India,
Trade Alternative Reform Action (Tara) Projects formed in the 1970s have worked
to increase production capacity, quality standards, and entrance into markets
for home-based craftsmen that were previously unattainable due to their lower
caste identity.
Fair trade commodities
Fair trade commodities are goods
that have been exchanged from where they were grown or made to where they are
purchased, and have been certified by a fair trade certification organization,
such as Fair Trade USA or World Fair Trade Organization. Such
organizations are typically overseen by Fairtrade International. Fairtrade
International sets international fair trade standards and supports fair trade
producers and cooperatives. Sixty percent of the fair trade market revolves
around food products such as coffee, tea, cocoa, honey, and bananas. Non-food
commodities include crafts, textiles, and flowers. It has been suggested by
Shima Baradaran of Brigham Young University that fair trade techniques could be
productively applied to products which might involve child labor.
Although fair trade represents only .01% of the food and beverage industry in
the United States, it is growing rapidly and may become a significant portion
of the national food and beverage industry.
Coffee
Coffee is the most
well-established fair trade commodity. Growth in the fair trade coffee industry
has extended the commodity away from solely small farms and companies. Now
multinational corporations such as Starbucks and Nestle use fair trade coffee.
Locations
The largest sources of fair trade
coffee are Uganda and Tanzania, followed by Latin American countries such as
Guatemala and Costa Rica. As of 1999, major importers of fair trade coffee
included Germany, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. There
is a North/South divide between fair trade consumers and producers. North
American countries are not yet among the top importers of fair trade coffee
because fair trade was introduced in Europe before the United States and
Canada.
Labour
Starbucks began to purchase more
fair trade coffee in 2001 because of charges of labor rights violations in
Central American plantations. Several competitors, including Nestle, followed
suit. Large corporations that sell non-fair trade coffee take 55% of what
consumers pay for coffee while only 10% goes to the producers. Small growers
dominate the production of coffee, especially in Latin American countries such
as Peru. Coffee is the fastest expanding fairly traded commodity, and an
increasing number of producers are small farmers that own their own land and
work in cooperatives. Even the incomes of growers of fair trade coffee beans
depend on the market value of coffee where it is consumed, so farmers of fair
trade coffee do not necessarily live above the poverty line or get completely
fair prices for their commodity.
Unsustainable farming practices
can harm plantation owners and laborers. Unsustainable practices such as using
chemicals and unshaded growing are risky. Small growers who put themselves at
economic risk by not having diverse farming practices could lose money and
resources due to fluctuating coffee prices, pest problems, or policy shifts.
Sustainability
As coffee becomes one of the most
important export crops in certain regions such as northern Latin America,
nature and agriculture are transformed. Increased productivity requires
technological innovations, and the coffee agroecosystem has been changing
rapidly. In the nineteenth century in Latin America, coffee plantations slowly
began replacing sugarcane and subsistence crops. Coffee crops became more
managed; they were put into rows and unshaded, meaning diversity of the forest
was decreased and Coffea
trees were shorter. As plant and tree diversity decreased, so did animal
diversity. Unshaded plantations allow for a higher density of Coffea trees, but
negative effects include less protection from wind and more easily eroded soil.
Technified coffee plantations also use chemicals such as fertilizers,
insecticides, and fungicides.
Fair trade certified commodities
must adhere to sustainable agro-ecological practices, including reduction of
chemical fertilizer use, prevention of erosion, and protection of forests.
Coffee plantations are more likely to be fair trade certified if they use
traditional farming practices with shading and without chemicals. This protects
the biodiversity of the ecosystem and ensures that the land will be usable for
farming in the future and not just for short-term planting. In the United
States, 85% of fair trade certified coffee is also organic.
Consumer attitudes
Consumers typically have positive
attitudes for products that are ethically made. These products may include
promises of fair labor conditions, protection of the environment, and
protection of human rights. All fair trade products must meet standards such as
these. Despite positive attitudes toward ethical products including fair trade
commodities, consumers often are not willing to pay the higher price associated
with fair trade coffee. The attitude-behavior gap can help explain why ethical
and fair trade products take up less than 1% of the market. Coffee consumers
can say they would be willing to pay a higher premium for fair trade coffee,
but most consumers are actually more concerned with the brand, label, and
flavor of the coffee. However, socially conscious consumers with a commitment
to buying fair trade products are more likely to pay the premium associated
with fair trade coffee. Once enough consumers begin purchasing fair trade,
companies are more likely to carry fair trade products. Safeway
Inc. began carrying fair trade coffee after individual consumers dropped
off postcards asking for it.
Fair trade coffee companies
Following are coffee roasters and
companies that offer fair trade coffee or some roasts that are fair trade
certified:
- Anodyne Coffee Roasting Company
- Breve Coffee Company
- Cafedirect
- Café Xaragua
- La Colombe Torrefaction
- Equal Exchange
- Green Mountain Coffee Roasters
- Invalsa Coffee Importers
- Just Us!
- Katz Coffee
- Larry's Beans
- Pura Vida Coffee
- Starbucks
- Counter Culture Coffee'
- Peace Coffee
Cocoa
Many countries that export cocoa
rely on cocoa as their single export crop. In Africa in particular, governments
tax cocoa as their main source of revenue. Cocoa is a permanent crop, which
means that it occupies land for long periods of time and does not need to be
replanted after each harvest.
Locations
Cocoa is farmed in the tropical
regions of West Africa, Southeast Asia, and Latin America. In Latin America,
cocoa is produced in Costa Rica, Panama, Peru, Bolivia, and Brazil. Much of the
cocoa produced in Latin America is organic and regulated by an Internal
control system. Bolivia has fair trade cooperatives that permit a fair
share of money for cocoa producers. African cocoa-producing countries include
Cameroon, Madagascar, São Tomé and Príncipe, Ghana, Tanzania, Uganda, and Côte
d'Ivoire. Côte d'Ivoire exports over a third of the world's cocoa beans. Southeast Asia accounts for about 14% of the
world's cocoa production. Major cocoa-producing countries are Indonesia,
Malaysia, and Papua New Guinea.
Labor
One suggestion for the reason that
laborers in Africa are marginalized in world trade is because the colonial
division of labor kept Africa from developing its own industries. Africa and
other developing countries received low prices for their exported commodities
such as cocoa, which caused poverty to abound. Fair trade seeks to establish a
system of direct trade from developing countries to counteract this unfair
system. Most cocoa comes from small family-run farms in West Africa. These
farms have little market access and thus rely on middlemen to bring their
products to market. Sometimes middlemen are unfair to farmers. Farmers do not
get a fair price for their product despite relying on cocoa sales for the
majority of their income. One solution for fair labor practices is for farmers
to become part of an Agricultural cooperative. Cooperatives pay
farmers a fair price for their cocoa so farmers have enough money for food,
clothes, and school fees. One of the main tenants of fair trade is that farmers
receive a fair price, but this does not mean that the larger amount of money
paid for fair trade cocoa goes directly to the farmers. In reality, much of
this money goes to community projects such as water wells rather than to
individual farmers. Nevertheless, cooperatives such as fair trade-endorsed Kuapa Kokoo
in Ghana are often the only Licensed Buying Companies that will give farmers a
fair price and not cheat them or rig sales. Farmers in cooperatives are
frequently their own bosses and get bonuses per bag of cocoa beans. These
arrangements are not always assured and fair trade organizations can't always
buy all of the cocoa available to them from cooperatives.
The effectiveness of Fairtrade is
questionable; workers on Fairtrade farms have a lower standard of living than
on similar farms outside the Fairtrade system.
Marketing
The marketing of fair trade cocoa
to European consumers often portrays the cocoa farmers as dependent on western
purchases for their livelihood and well-being. Showing African cocoa producers
in this way is problematic because it is reminiscent of the imperialistic view
that Africans cannot live happily without the help of westerners. It puts the
balance of power in favor of the consumers rather than the producers.
Consumers often aren't willing to
pay the extra price for fair trade cocoa because they do not know what fair
trade is. Activist groups are vital in educating consumers about the unethical
aspects of unfair trade and promoting demand for fairly traded commodities.
Activism and ethical consumption not only promote fair trade but also act
against powerful corporations such as Mars, Incorporated that refuse to acknowledge
the use of forced child labor in the harvesting of their cocoa.
Sustainability
Smallholding farmers not only
frequently lack access to markets, they lack access to resources that lead to
sustainable cocoa farming practices. Lack of sustainability can be due to
pests, diseases that attack cocoa trees, lack of farming supplies, and lack of
knowledge about modern farming techniques. One issue pertaining to cocoa
plantation sustainability is the amount of time it takes for a cocoa tree to
produce pods. A solution to this is to change the type of cocoa tree being
farmed. In Ghana, a hybrid cocoa tree yields two crops after three years rather
than the typical one crop after five years.
Fair trade cocoa companies
Following are chocolate companies
that use all or some fair trade cocoa in their chocolate:
- Ben & Jerry's
- Cadbury
- Chocolate and Love
- Chocolove
- Dagoba Chocolate
- Divine Chocolate
- Endangered Species Chocolate
- Equal Exchange
- Green & Black's
- Guittard Chocolate Company
- Theo Chocolate
Textiles
Fair trade textiles are primarily
made from fair trade cotton. They are frequently grouped with fair trade crafts
and goods made by artisans in contrast to cocoa, coffee, sugar, tea, and honey,
which are agricultural commodities.
Locations
India, Pakistan and West Africa
are the primary exporters of fair trade cotton, although many countries grow
fair trade cotton. Textiles and clothing are exported from Hong Kong, Thailand,
Malaysia, and Indonesia.
Labour
Labour is different for textile
production than for agricultural commodities because textile production takes
place in a factory, not on a farm. Children provide a source of cheap labor,
and child labor is prevalent in Pakistan, India, and Nepal. Fair trade
cooperatives ensure fair and safe labor practices, including disallowing child
labor. Fair trade textile producers are most often women in developing
countries. They struggle with meeting the consumer tastes in North America and
Europe. In Nepal, textiles were originally made for household and local use. In
the 1990s, women began joining cooperatives and exporting their crafts for
profit. Now handicrafts are Nepal's largest export. It is often difficult for
women to balance textile production, domestic responsibilities, and
agricultural work. Cooperatives foster the growth of democratic communities in
which women have a voice despite being historically in underprivileged
positions. For fair trade textiles and other crafts to be successful in western
markets, World Fair Trade Organizations
require a flexible workforce of artisans in need of stable income, links from
consumers to artisans, and a market for quality ethnic products. However,
making cotton and textiles fair trade does not always have a positive impact on
laborers. Burkina Faso and Mali export the largest amount of cotton in Africa.
Although many cotton plantations in these countries attained fair trade
certification in the 1990s, participation in fair trade further ingrains
existing power relations and inequalities that cause poverty in Africa rather
than challenging them. Fair trade does not do much for farmers when it does not
challenge the system that marginalizes producers. Despite not empowering
farmers, the change to fair trade cotton has positive effects including female
participation in cultivation.
Textiles and garments are
intricate and require one individual operator, in contrast to the collective
farming of coffee and cocoa beans. Textiles are not a straightforward commodity
because to be fairly traded, there must be regulation in cotton cultivation,
dyeing, stitching, and every other step in the process of textile production.
Fair trade textiles must not be confused with the sweat-free movement although
the two movements intersect at the worker level.
Forced or unfair labor in textile
production is not limited to developing countries. Charges of use of sweatshop
labor are endemic in the United States. Immigrant women work long hours and
receive less than minimum wage. In the United States, there is more of a stigma
against child labor than forced labor in general. Consumers in the United
States are willing to suspend the importation of textiles made with child labor
in other countries but do not expect their exports to be suspended by other
countries, even when produced using forced labor.
Fair trade clothing and textile
companies
Large companies and fair trade
commodities
Large transnational companies have
begun to use fair trade commodities in their products. In April 2000, Starbucks
began offering fair trade coffee in all of their stores. In 2005, the company
promised to purchase ten million pounds of fair trade coffee over the next 18
months. This would account for a quarter of the fair trade coffee purchases in
the United States and 3% of Starbucks' total coffee purchases. The company
maintains that increasing its fair trade purchases would require an
unprofitable reconstruction of the supply chain. Fair trade activists have made
gains with other companies: Sara Lee in 2002 and Procter
& Gamble (the maker of Folgers) in 2003 agreed to begin selling a small amount of
fair trade coffee. Nestle,
the world's biggest coffee trader, began selling a blend of fair trade coffee
in 2005. In 2006, The Hershey Company acquired Dagoba, an organic
and fair trade chocolate brand.
Much contention surrounds the
issue of fair trade products becoming a part of large companies. Starbucks is
still only 3% fair trade - enough to appease consumers, but not enough to make
a real difference to small farmers, according to some activists. The ethics of
buying fair trade from a company that is not committed to the cause are
questionable; these products are only making a small dent in a big company even
though these companies' products account for a significant portion of global
fair trade.
Business Type
|
Engagement with fair trade
products
|
Highest
|
|
Fair Trade Organizations
|
Equal Exchange
|
Global Crafts
|
|
Values-driven Organizations
|
The Body Shop
|
Green Mountain Coffee
|
|
Pro-active Socially Responsible
Businesses
|
Starbucks
|
Whole Foods
|
|
Defensive Socially Responsible
Businesses
|
Procter & Gamble
|
Lowest
|
Luxury Commodities
There have been efforts to
introduce fair trade practices to the luxury industry, particularly for gold
and diamonds.
Diamonds and Sourcing
In parallel to efforts to
commoditize diamonds, some industry players have launched campaigns to
introduce benefits to mining centers in the Third World. Rapaport Fair Trade
was established with the goal "to provide ethical education for jewelry
suppliers, buyers, first time or seasoned diamond buyers, social activists,
students, and anyone interested in jewelry, trends, and ethical luxury."
The company's founder, Martin
Rapaport, as well as Kimberley
Process initiators Ian Smillie and Global
Witness, are among several industry insiders and observers who have called
for greater checks and certification programs among many other programs that
would ensure protection for miners and producers in Third World countries.
Smillie and Global Witness have since withdrawn support for the Kimberley
Process.
Other concerns in the diamond
industry include working conditions in diamond cutting centers as well as the
use of child labor. Both of these concerns come up when considering issues in
Surat, India.
Gold
Brilliant Earth has committed
itself to using fair-trade-certified gold. In February 2011, the United
Kingdom's Fairtrade Foundation became the first NGO to begin certifying gold
under the fair trade rubric. Fair Trade USA, however, hadn't taken that step as
of summer 2012.
Politics
European Union
In 1994, the European Commission
prepared the "Memo on alternative trade" in which it declared its
support for strengthening Fair Trade in the South and North and its intention
to establish an EC Working Group on Fair Trade. Furthermore, the same year, the
European Parliament adopted the
"Resolution on promoting fairness and solidarity in North South
trade" (OJ C 44, 14.2.1994), a resolution voicing its support for fair
trade.
In 1996, the Economic and Social Committee adopted
an "Opinion on the European 'Fair Trade' marking movement". A year
later, in 1997, the document was followed by a resolution adopted by the
European Parliament, calling on the Commission to support Fair Trade banana
operators. The same year, the European Commission published a survey on
"Attitudes of EU consumers to Fair Trade bananas", concluding that
Fair Trade bananas would be commercially viable in several EU Member States.
In 1998, the European Parliament
adopted the "Resolution on Fair Trade" (OJ C 226/73, 20.07.1998),
which was followed by the Commission in 1999 that adopted the
"Communication from the Commission to the Council on 'Fair Trade'"
COM(1999) 619 final, 29.11.1999.
In 2000, public institutions in
Europe started purchasing Fairtrade Certified coffee and tea. Furthermore, that
year, the Cotonou Agreement made specific reference to the
promotion of Fair Trade in article 23(g) and in the Compendium. The European
Parliament and Council Directive 2000/36/EC also suggested promoting Fair
Trade.
In 2001 and 2002, several other EU
papers explicitly mentioned fair trade, most notably the 2001 Green Paper on Corporate Social Responsibility and
the 2002 Communication on Trade and Development.
In 2004, the European
Union adopted the "Agricultural Commodity Chains, Dependence and
Poverty – A proposal for an EU Action Plan", with a specific reference to
the Fair Trade movement which has "been setting the trend for a more
socio-economically responsible trade." (COM(2004)0089).
In 2005, in the European
Commission communication "Policy Coherence for Development – Accelerating
progress towards attaining the Millennium Development Goals", (COM(2005)
134 final, 12.04.2005), fair trade is mentioned as "a tool for poverty
reduction and sustainable development".
And finally, on July 6 in 2006,
the European Parliament unanimously adopted a resolution on fair trade,
recognizing the benefits achieved by the Fair Trade movement, suggesting the
development of an EU-wide policy on Fair Trade, defining criteria that need to
be fulfilled under fair trade to protect it from abuse and calling for greater
support to Fair Trade (EP resolution "Fair Trade and development", 6
July 2006). "This resolution responds to the impressive growth of Fair
Trade, showing the increasing interest of European consumers in responsible
purchasing," said Green MEP Frithjof
Schmidt during the plenary debate. Peter
Mandelson, EU Commissioner for External Trade, responded that the
resolution will be well received at the Commission. "Fair Trade makes the
consumers think and therefore it is even more valuable. We need to develop a
coherent policy framework and this resolution will help us."
France
In 2005, French parliament member Antoine
Herth issued the report "40 proposals to sustain the development of
Fair Trade". The report was followed the same year by a law, proposing to
establish a commission to recognize fair trade Organisations (article 60 of law
no. 2005-882, Small and Medium Enterprises, 2 August 2005).
In parallel to the legislativents,
also in 2006, the French chapter of ISO (AFNOR) adopted
a reference document on Fair Trade after five years of discussion.
Italy
In 2006, Italian lawmakers started
debating how to introduce a law on fair trade in Parliament. A consultation process involving a
wide range of stakeholders was launched in early October. A common definition
of fair trade was most notably developed. However, its adoption is still
pending as the efforts were stalled by the 2008 Italian political crisis.
Netherlands
The Dutch province of Groningen was sued in 2007 by coffee supplier Douwe
Egberts for explicitly requiring its coffee suppliers to meet fair trade
criteria, most notably the payment of a minimum price and a development premium
to producer cooperatives. Douwe Egberts, which sells a number of coffee brands
under self-developed ethical criteria, believed the requirements were
discriminatory. After several months of discussions and legal challenges, the
province of Groningen prevailed in a well-publicized judgement. Coen de Ruiter,
director of the Max Havelaar Foundation, called the victory
a landmark event: "it provides governmental institutions the freedom in
their purchasing policy to require suppliers to provide coffee that bears the
fair trade criteria, so that a substantial and meaningful contribution is made
in the fight against poverty through the daily cup of coffee".
Criticisms
In spite of studies showing Fair
Trade efficiency, some studies have shown limitations to Fair Trade benefits.
Sometimes the criticism is intrinsic to Fair Trade, sometimes efficiency
depends on the broader context such as the lack of government help or volatile
coffee prices in the global market.
Ethical basis of criticisms
Consumers have been shown to be
content paying higher prices for Fairtrade products, in the belief that this
helps the very poor. The main ethical criticism of Fairtrade is that this
premium over non-Fairtrade products does not reach the producers and is instead
collected by businesses, employees of co-operatives or used for unnecessary
expenses. Furthermore, research has cited the implementation of certain
Fairtrade standards as a cause for greater inequalities in markets where these
rigid rules are inappropriate for the specific market.
What happens to the money
Little money may reach the
developing countries
The Fairtrade Foundation does not
monitor how much extra retailers charge for Fairtrade goods, so it is rarely
possible to determine how much extra is charged or how much reaches the
producers, in spite of the Unfair Trading legislation. In four cases it has
been possible to find out. One British café chain was passing on less than one
percent of the extra charged to the exporting cooperative; in Finland, Valkila,
Haaparanta and Niemi found that consumers paid much more for Fairtrade, and
that only 11.5% reached the exporter. Kilian, Jones, Pratt and Villalobos talk
of US Fairtrade coffee getting $5 per lb extra at retail, of which the exporter
would have received only 2%. Mendoza and Bastiaensen calculated that in the UK
only 1.6% to 18% of the extra charged for one product line reached the farmer.
All these studies assume that the importers paid the full Fairtrade price,
which is not necessarily the case.
Less money reaches farmers
The Fairtrade Foundation does not
monitor how much of the extra money paid to the exporting cooperatives reaches
the farmer. The cooperatives incur costs in reaching the Fairtrade political
standards, and these are incurred on all production, even if only a small
amount is sold at Fairtrade prices. The most successful cooperatives appear to
spend a third of the extra price received on this: some less successful
cooperatives spend more than they gain. While this appears to be agreed by
proponents and critics of Fairtrade, there is a dearth of economic studies
setting out the actual revenues and what the money was spent on. FLO figures
are that 40% of the money reaching the Third World
is spent on ‘business and production’ which would include these costs, as well
as costs incurred by any inefficiency and corruption in the cooperative or the
marketing system. The rest is stated to be spent on social projects, rather
than being passed on to farmers.
There is no evidence that
Fairtrade farmers get higher prices on average. Anecdotes state that farmers
were paid more or less by traders than by Fairtrade cooperatives. Few of these
anecdotes address the problems of price reporting in Third World markets, and
few appreciate the complexity of the different price packages which may or may
not include credit, harvesting, transport, processing, etc. Cooperatives
typically average prices over the year, so they pay less than traders at some
times, more at others. Bassett (2009) is able to compare prices only where
Fairtrade and non-Fairtrade farmers have to sell cotton to the same
monopsonistic ginneries which pay low prices. Prices would have to be higher to
compensate farmers for the increased costs they incur to produce Fairtrade. For
instance, Fairtrade encouraged Nicaraguan farmers to switch to organic coffee,
which resulted in a higher price per pound, but a lower net income because of
higher costs and lower yields.
Lack of evidence of impact
There have been very few attempts
at fair trade impact studies. It would be
methodologically and logically incorrect to use these attempts to conclude that
Fairtrade in general does or does not have a positive impact. Griffiths (2011)
argues that few of these attempts meet the normal standards for an impact
study, such as comparing the before and after situation, and having meaningful
control groups. Serious methodological problems arise in sampling, in comparing
prices, and from the fact that the social projects of Fairtrade do not usually
aim to produce economic benefits.
Inefficient marketing system
One reason for high prices is that
Fairtrade farmers have to sell through a monopsonist cooperative, which may be
inefficient or corrupt – certainly some private traders are more efficient than
some cooperatives. They cannot choose the buyer who offers the best price, or
switch when their cooperative is going bankrupt if they wish to retain
fairtrade status. There are also complaints that Fairtrade deviates from the
free market ideal of some economists. Brink calls fair trade a "misguided
attempt to make up for market failures" encouraging market inefficiencies
and overproduction.
Corruption
The Fair Trade marketing system
provides more opportunities for corruption than the normal marketing system;
and less possibility of, or incentive for, controlling corruption. Corruption
has been noted in false labelling of coffee as Fairtrade by retailers and by
packers in the developing countries, paying exporters less than the Fairtrade
price for Fairtrade coffee (kickbacks) failure to provide the credit and other
services specified theft or preferential treatment for ruling elites of
cooperatives not paying laborers the specified minimum wage
Fairtrade harms other farmers
Overproduction argument
Critics argue that Fairtrade harms
all non-Fairtrade farmers. Fairtrade claims that its farmers are paid higher
prices and are given special advice on increasing yields and quality.
Economists state that, if this is indeed so, Fairtrade farmers will increase
production. As the demand for coffee is highly inelastic, a small increase in
supply means a large fall in market price, so perhaps a million Fairtrade
farmers get a higher price and 24 million others get a substantially lower
price. Critics quote the example of farmers in Vietnam being paid over the
world price in the 1980s, planting lots of coffee, then flooding the world
market in the 1990s. The Fairtrade minimum price means that when the world
market price collapses, it is the non-Fairtrade farmers, particularly the
poorest, who have to cut down their coffee trees. This argument is supported by
mainstream economists, not just free marketers.
Diverting aid from other
farmers
Fairtrade supporters boast of ‘The
Honeypot Effect’ – that cooperatives which become Fairtrade members then
attract additional aid from other NGO charities, government and international
donors as a result of their membership. Typically there are now six to twelve
other donors. Critics point out that this inevitably means that resources are
being removed from other, poorer, farmers. It also makes it impossible to argue
that any positive or negative changes in the living standards of farmers are
due to Fairtrade rather than to one of the other donors.
Other ethical issues
Secrecy
Under EU law (Directive 2005/29/EC on
Unfair Commercial Practices) the criminal offence of Unfair Trading is
committed if (a) ‘it contains false information and is therefore untruthful or
in any way, including overall presentation, deceives or is likely to deceive
the average consumer, even if the information is factually correct’, (b) ‘it
omits material information that the average consumer needs . . . and thereby causes
or is likely to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision
that he would not have taken otherwise’ or (c) ‘fails to identify the
commercial intent of the commercial practice . . . [which] causes or is likely
to cause the average consumer to take a transactional decision that he would
not have taken otherwise.’ Griffiths (2011) points to false claims that
Fairtrade producers get higher prices, the almost universal failure to disclose
the extra price charged for Fairtrade products, to disclose how much of this
actually reaches the Third World, to disclose what this is spent on in the
Third World, to disclose how much, if any, reaches farmers, and to disclose the
harm that Fairtrade does to non-Fairtrade farmers. He also points to the
failure to disclose when ‘the primary commercial intent’ is to make money for
retailers and distributors in rich countries.
Imposing politics
The Fairtrade criteria are
essentially political, and critics state that it is unethical to bribe Third
World producers to adopt a set of political views that they may not agree with,
and the donors providing the money may not agree with. In addition many of the
failures of Fairtrade derive from these political views, such as the unorthodox
marketing system imposed. Boersma (2002, 2009) the founder of Fairtrade, and
like minded people are aiming at a new, non-capitalist way of running the
market and the economy. This may not tie in with the objectives of producers,
consumers, importers or retailers.
Unethical selling techniques
Booth says that the selling
techniques used by some sellers and some supporters of Fairtrade are bullying,
misleading, and unethical. There are problems with the use of boycott campaigns
and other pressure to force sellers to stock a product they think ethically
suspect. However, the opposite has been argued, that a more participatory and
multi-stakeholder approach to auditing might improve the quality of the
process. Some people argue that these practices are justifiable: that strategic
use of labeling may help embarrass (or encourage) major suppliers into changing
their practices. They may make transparent corporate vulnerabilities that
activists can exploit. Or they may encourage ordinary people to get involved
with broader projects of social change.
Misleading volunteers
A lot of people volunteer to work
to support Fairtrade. They may do unpaid work for firms, or market Fairtrade in
schools, universities, local governments, or parliament. Crane and Davies’
study shows that distributors in developed countries make ‘considerable use of
unpaid volunteer workers for routine tasks, many of whom seemed to be under the
(false) impression that they were helping out a charity.’
Failure to monitor standards
There are complaints that the
standards are inappropriate and may harm producers, sometimes making them work
several months more for little return.
Adherence to fair trade standards
by producers has been poor, and enforcement of standards by Fairtrade is weak.
Notably by Christian Jacquiau and by Paola Ghillani, who spent four years as
president of Fairtrade Labelling Organizations There are many
complaints of poor enforcement problems: labourers on Fairtrade farms in Peru
are paid less than the minimum wage; some non-Fairtrade coffee is sold as
Fairtrade ‘the standards are not very strict in the case of seasonally hired
labour in coffee production.’ ‘some fair trade standards are not strictly
enforced’ supermarkets avoid their responsibility. In 2006, a Financial
Times journalist found that ten out of ten mills visited had sold
uncertified coffee to co-operatives as certified. It reported that "The FT
was also handed evidence of at least one coffee association that received an
organic, Fair Trade or other certifications despite illegally growing some 20
per cent of its coffee in protected national forest land.
Trade justice and fair trade
Segments of the trade
justice movement have also criticized fair trade in the past years for
allegedly focusing too much on individual small producer groups while stopping
short of advocating immediate trade policy changes that would have a larger
impact on disadvantaged producers' lives. French author and RFI correspondent Jean-Pierre
Boris championed this view in his 2005 book Commerce inéquitable.
Political objections
There have been largely political
criticisms of Fairtrade from the left and the right. Some believe the fair
trade system is not radical enough. French author Christian Jacquiau, in his
book Les coulisses du commerce équitable, calls for stricter fair trade
standards and criticizes the fair trade movement for working within the current
system (i.e., partnerships with mass retailers, multinational corporations, etc.) rather
than establishing a new fairer, fully autonomous(i.e. government monopoly)
trading system. Jacquiau is also a staunch supporter of significantly higher
fair trade prices in order to maximize the impact, as most producers only sell
a portion of their crop under fair trade terms. It has been argued that the
approach of the FairTrade system is too rooted in a Northern consumerist view
of justice which Southern producers do not participate in setting. "A key
issue is therefore to make explicit who possesses the power to define the terms
of Fairtrade, that is who possesses the power to determine the need of an ethic
in the first instance, and subsequently command a particular ethical vision as
the truth."
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