Fair Trade Counters Poverty

As my contribution to Blog Action Day 2008, I’d like to advocate for fair trade as an effective anti-poverty strategy. Not only does fair trade provide a price floor for farmers and workers who produce the raw materials for many products we consume, it also, and that makes it different from any other certification scheme, provide a social premium that is invested in community projects that benefit all members of the communities.

The concept of a floor price is important because it protects farmers from the worst aspects of a down turn in commodity prices. The contracts that fair trade cooperatives negotiate with fair trade manufacturers and distributors lock are guaranteed not to fall below that floor price. For cocoa that price is $1,600 per ton. For most of the past two decades, that price protected the minimum income of farmers when world cocoa prices dropped as low as $1,000 per ton.

But what happens if the world market price is higher than $1,600 per ton? Farmers will, of course, receive that higher world market price. But this is where the second feature of fair trade comes into play–the social premium of $150 per ton.

Take the Kuapa Kokoo cocoa cooperative in Ghana for example. If they sell 1,000 tons of fair trade cocoa, the cooperative will receive $150,000 in social premium. Those funds are then turned over to the Kuapa Kokoo Farmers Trust which will distribute the monies to individual village societies for projects that benefit the society as a whole. Such projects have included water pumps, privies, and schools. They directly improve the lives of farmers.

So if you want to fight poverty in the cocoa sector, buy fair trade chocolate and cocoa. It’s easy and it tastes good.

October is Fair Trade Month!

I almost forgot to write this post. October is Fair Trade Month. It is an important reminder to consider fair trade purchases whenever possible. Not just during this month, but always. Having just returned from Europe, I was again astonished how much more prevalent fair trade products are in ordinary stores. The U.S. still has a lot of catching up to do.

As the mortgage-banking-credit crisis gathered full steam over the past two years, I could not help but see parallels between the ever more esoteric financial derivatives invented by profit hungry investment bankers and the lives of those stuck with an rotten mortgage on the one hand and the operations of the futures and options markets in relation to the lives of the farmers who grow the raw materials that satisfy our cravings on the other.

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New Research Upsets Old Cocoa Classification

New research published in the journal PLoS One (Public Library of Science), reveals that there is far more genetic diversity in cocoa trees than hitherto assumed. Anyone interested in cocoa and chocolate has know for a long time that there are three varieties: criollo, forastero and trinitario.

The names date back to the early days of the Spanish conquest. The trees growing in Mexico, particularly Soconusco, and Central America were thought to produce the highest quality of beans and were called criollo or “native.” The beans from the Amazon area were considered to be of inferior quality. When they began to show up in Mexico, there were called forastero or “foreigner” to distinguish them from the home grown variety. Later, enterprising farmers in Trinidad hybridized the two varieties and produced the third strain, trinitario. Or so the story goes.

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Côte d’Ivoire begins Cocoa Sector Cleanup

Readers of this blog will remember my earlier post on the corruption in the Ivorian cocoa sector. Well documented in Carol Off’s book, the key institutions put in place after the 2000 liberalization of the cocoa sector (the BCC – Bourse du Café et du Cacao, the FDPCC – Fonds de Développement et de Promotion des Activités des Producteurs de Café et de Cacao – and the FRC – Fonds the Régulation et Control) were quickly turned into corrupt institutions that served to enrich a small elite surrounding president Laurent Gbagbo.

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