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International Fairtrade Certification Mark

The International Fairtrade Certification Mark is an independent certification mark used in over 50 countries. It appears on products as an independent guarantee that a product has been produced according to Fairtrade political standards.

International Fairtrade Certification Mark
The International Fairtrade Certification Mark
Certifying agencyFairtrade International
Effective since2002; 21 years ago (2002)
Product categoryVarious

The Fairtrade Mark is owned and protected by Fairtrade International (FLO), on behalf of its 25-member and associate member Fairtrade producer networks and labelling initiatives.

For a product to carry the Fairtrade Mark, it must come from FLOCert inspected and certified producer organizations. The crops must be marketed in accordance with the International Fairtrade standards set by Fairtrade International. The supply chain is also monitored by FLOCert. 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 organisations in more than 50 countries in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.[1] In the Fair trade debate there are many complaints of failure to enforce these standards, with Fairtrade cooperatives, importers and packers profiting by evading them.[2]

As of 2006, the following products currently carry the Fairtrade Mark: coffee, tea, chocolate, cocoa, sugar, bananas, apples, pears, grapes, plums, lemons, oranges, Satsumas, clementines, lychees, avocados, pineapples, mangoes, fruit juices, quinoa, peppers, green beans, coconut, dried fruit, rooibos tea, green tea, cakes and biscuits, honey, muesli, cereal bars, jams, chutney and sauces, herbs and spices, nuts and nut oil, wine, beer, rum, flowers, footballs, rice, yogurt, baby food, sugar body scrub, cotton wool and cotton products.[3]

How it works

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.[4] 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.[5]

Retailers and cafes in the rich countries can sell Fairtrade coffee at any price they like, so nearly all the extra price paid by consumers, 82% to 99%, is kept in the rich countries as increased profit.[6] There is however evidence that dishonest importers do not pay the full Fairtrade price, so an even smaller proportion reaches the Third World.[7]

Cooperative traders and exporters can sell coffee as Fairtrade certified if they meet the political standards of FLO and they pay a certification and inspection fee. Other administration costs and production costs are incurred to meet these standards. The exporter (not the farmer) is paid a minimum price for Fairtrade certified coffee when the world market is oversupplied, and a Fairtrade premium of 15c per lb at other times. 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.[8] As the additional costs are incurred on all production, not just that sold as Fairtrade, cooperatives sometimes lose money on their Fairtrade membership.[9] After the additional costs have been subtracted from the Fairtrade price, the rest goes on ‘Social Projects’ such as clinics, women’s groups and baseball pitches.

Farmers do not get any of the higher price under Fairtrade.[10] Nor is there any evidence that they get higher prices as a result of better marketing: the cooperatives sometimes pay farmers a higher price than farmers do, sometimes less, but there is no evidence on which is more common.[11] Farmers do, however, incur extra costs in producing Fairtrade, so they certainly do lose money from Fairtrade membership in some cases. There is little or no research on the extra costs incurred, or the effect of Fairtrade membership on the income of farmers.

Disambiguation: 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[12] 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.".[13] The word is used in all these meanings in key documents.[14] 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”.[15] 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 halfway up the marketing chain between the farmer and the consumer.[15] The part of the standards referring to cultivation, environment, pesticides and child labour has the farmer as "producer". The part referring to democratic organization has the primary cooperative as "producer".

Fairtrade Standards contain minimum requirements that all producer organisations must meet to become certified as well as progress requirements in which producers must demonstrate improvements over time.

There are several types of Fairtrade Standards: Standards for small farmers' organizations.”,[16] standards for hired labour situations,[17] standards for contract situations[18] and standards for trade (importers),[19] and there are also standards for the different products.

Fairtrade Standards for small farmers' organizations include requirements for democratic decision making, ensuring that producers have a say in how the Fairtrade Premiums are invested etc. They also include requirements for capacity building and economic strengthening of the organization.

Fairtrade Standards for hired labour situations ensure that employees receive minimum wages and bargain collectively. Fairtrade-certified plantations must also ensure that there is no forced or child labour and that health and safety requirements are met. (These labor standards do not apply to, Fairtrade "small farmer cooperatives" though some have an average of 2.39 ha per farmer of just one crop, coffee, with some single farmers having more than 23 ha coffee, implying substantial use of hired labor.)[20] In a hired labour situation, Fairtrade Standards require a "joint body" to be set up with representatives from both the management and the employees. This joint body decides on how Fairtrade Premiums will be spent to benefit plantation employees.

For some products, such as coffee, only Fairtrade Standards for small farmers' organizations are applicable. For others, such as tea, both small farmers' organizations and plantations can be certified.

Trade standards cover the payment of premiums, of minimum prices, where applicable, the provision of credit to buy the crop, and commercial relationships between the exporting cooperative or other organization and the importer.

Typically, in order for a product to be marked as "Fair-trade " at least 20% of its mass must be made up of a Fairtrade product.

Fairtrade Standards and procedures are approved by the Fairtrade International Standards Committee, an external committee comprising all FLO stakeholders (labeling initiatives, producers and traders) and external experts. Fairtrade Standards are set by FLO in accordance to the requirements of the ISEAL Code of Good Practice in standard setting and are in addition the result of a consultation process, involving a variety of stakeholders: producers, traders, external experts, inspectors, certification staff etc.[21]

There are however criticisms of the standards. There have been complaints that Fairtrade standards are inappropriate and may harm producers, sometimes imposing months of additional work for little return.[22] There have also been complaints that standards set by a small committee of activists in the rich north have been imposed on poor farmers in the Third World. Fraser suggests that they are a rag bag of requirements imposed without thought of what is to be achieved or how.[23]

Fairtrade pricing

The main aspects of the Fairtrade system are the Minimum Price and the Premium. These are paid to the exporting firm, usually a second tier cooperative, not to the farmer. They are not paid for everything produced by the cooperative members, but for that proportion of13their output they are able to sell with the brand 'Fairtrade Certified', typically 17% to as much as 60% of their turnover.

  • The Fairtrade Premium is an extra payment over the market price (e.g. an extra 20c/lb for coffee) which is paid to the exporting organization. The residual after extra costs have been met must be spent on “social projects” for social and economic development in the producing communities, rather than being given to farmers as extra payment.[24] The producers themselves decide how these funds are to be spent. They are generally used for improvements in health, education or other social facilities, although it may also be used for certain development projects to enable farmers to improve productivity or reduce their reliance on single commodities. As part of the Fairtrade criteria, registered producers are accountable to FLOCert for the use of this money.
  • The Fairtrade Minimum Price is a guaranteed price to be paid for a few products like coffee when the world prices collapse. Again, it would usually be spent on "social projects" rather than going to the farmers.

There are complaints that the standards relating to paying of price premiums, minimum prices, provision of credit, etc. by importers in rich countries are not enforced.[25] In particular importers can demand to get a higher quality at the same official Fairtrade price, or withhold other services, threatening to buy from another Fairtrade supplier if the exporter did not agree to this kickback, or if the supplier complains that a kickback is demanded. De Janvry, McIntosh and Sadoulet[26] have quantified this for a large group of Fairtrade coffee cooperatives in South America over a dozen years. They found that this kickback was 10c a pound over a period when the official price premium was 5c or 10c a pound, and this, plus the certification fee, meant that the cooperatives made a loss in years when a premium was payable, and were paid substantially less than the official minimum prices in years when a minimum price was payable. These should have been identified and rectified by the certification agency.

Fairtrade inspection and certification

Fairtrade inspection and certification are carried out, for a fee,[27] by FLOCert, an independent, for profit, body created by Fairtrade International in 2004. FLO-CERT certifies that both producers and traders have met with Fairtrade Standards and that producers have invested any surplus received through Fairtrade in social projects.

FLO-CERT works with a network of around 100 independent inspectors that regularly visit producer and trade organizations and report back to FLO-CERT. All certification decisions are then taken by a Certification Committee, composed of stakeholders from producers, traders, national labelling organisations and external experts. An Appeals Committee handles all appeals.

FLO-CERT inspections and certification follow the international ISO standards for product certification bodies (ISO 65).

There have been claims that adherence to fair trade standards by producers has been poor and that enforcement of standards by Fairtrade is very weak, notably by Christian Jacquiau.[28] and by Paola Ghillani, who spent four years as president of Fairtrade Labelling Organizations.[28] There is criticism of poor enforcement: labourers on Fairtrade farms in Peru are paid less than the minimum wage;[29] some non-Fairtrade coffee is sold as Fairtrade;[30] "the standards are not very strict in the case of seasonally hired labour in coffee production";[31] "some fair trade standards are not strictly enforced";[32] and supermarkets may avoid their responsibility.[33] In 2006, a Financial Times journalist found that ten out of the ten mills they visited had sold uncertified coffee to co-operatives as certified. It reported that they were "also handed evidence of at least one coffee association that received Fairtrade certification despite illegally growing some 20 per cent of its coffee in protected national forest land.[30]

Costs and returns

Fairtrade farmers and marketing organizations incur a wide range of costs in achieving and maintaining certification. They incur these costs on all their production, but they can only recover costs on the small part of their production that they can sell as "Fairtrade certified". In practice they can sell only small of their output as Fairtrade, because of lack of demand, and must sell the rest as uncertified at world prices. For example, there is not enough demand to take all the certified coffee produced, so most has to be sold as uncertified. In 2001 only 13.6% could be sold as certified[34] so limits were placed on new cooperatives joining the scheme. This plus an increased demand put up sales of certified to around 50% in 2003[35] with a figure of 37% commonly cited in recent years. Some exporting cooperatives do not manage to sell any of their output as certified,[36] and others sell as little as 8%.[37] Weber[36] reports cooperatives not able to cover the extra costs of a marketing team for Fairtrade, with one covering only 70% of these costs after six years of Fairtrade membership.

Certified organizations such as cooperatives have to pay FLOCert a fee to become certified and a further annual fee for audit and continued certification Fairtrade inspection and certification are carried out, for a fee.[27] The first year certification fee per unit sold as "Fairtrade certified" varies but has been over 6c/lb with an annual fee of 3c/lb to 3.4c/b for coffee up to 2006 in some countries, at a time when the "Fairtrade premium" was 5c to 10c/lb.[38]

The cooperative or other certified organization has to spend money on conforming to the standards, with changed employment practices, the introduction and administration of the required democratic processes, changed processing, labelling and packing, changed material. They also incur extra costs in selling: . Weber[36] reports cooperatives not able to cover the extra costs of a marketing team for Fairtrade, with one covering only 70% of these costs after six years of Fairtrade membership.

It is generally agreed that some organizations make a loss from their Fairtrade certification.[39] but there are very few economic studies showing what happened to the money.

Fairtrade farmers also have to meet a large range of criteria on production: there are limits on using child labour, pesticides, herbicides, genetically modified products etc.[40] These cost money, mean that the farmers have to do more work in the hot sun, and that they have to hire labour instead of using family labour. In times when world prices are so low that there is no “social premium” and the minimum price is paid, some farmers have negotiated that some of the money is paid to them, rather than being used for social projects.

History

Fairtrade labelled coffee, the first Fairtrade labelled product, was first launched in the Netherlands in 1988. The label, launched by Nico Roozen and Dutch missionary Frans van der Hoff, was then called Max Havelaar after a fictional Dutch character who opposed the exploitation of coffee pickers in Dutch colonies. Fairtrade labelling allowed Fairtrade Certified goods to be sold outside the World shops for the first time and into mainstream retailers, reaching a larger consumer segment and boosting sales significantly.

The concept caught on: in the ensuing years, similar non-profit Fairtrade labelling organizations were set up in other European countries and North America, called “Max Havelaar” (in Belgium, Switzerland, Denmark, Norway and France), "Transfair" (in Germany, Luxembourg, Austria, Italy, the United States, Canada and Japan), or carrying a national name: “Fairtrade Mark” in the UK and Ireland, "Rättvisemärkt" in Sweden, and "Reilu Kauppa" in Finland. Initially, the Max Havelaars and the Transfairs each had their own Fairtrade standards, product committees and monitoring systems. In 1994, a process of convergence among the labelling organizations – or "LIs" (for "Labelling Initiatives") – started with the establishment of a TransMax working group, culminating in 1997 in the creation of Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International, now known simply as Fairtrade 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 a new Fairtrade Certification Mark. The goals of the launch were to improve the visibility of the Mark on supermarket shelves, convey a dynamic, forward-looking image for Fairtrade, facilitate cross border trade and simplify procedures for importers and traders.

The Fairtrade Mark harmonization process is still under way – as of March 2011, all but two labelling initiatives[dubious ](TransFair USA and TransFair Canada) have fully adopted the new international Certification Mark.[41] These two organizations currently use the Fair Trade Certified Mark, however Canadian organization began actively promoting the new international Certification Mark in 2010 as part of a total transition toward it. TransFair USA has apparently elected to continue with its own mark for the time being.[42]

At present, over 19 FLO Member Labelling Initiatives are using the International Fairtrade Certification Mark. There are now Fairtrade Certification Marks 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 and footballs etc.[3]

Criticism

According to the economist Bruce Wydick with the median coffee drinker willing to pay a premium of 50 cents for a cup of fair-trade coffee even in the best-case scenario for fair trade, when world prices are at their lowest, the maximum amount a fair-trade grower from that same cup of coffee would receive is only one third of a cent[43] Wydick lists his points against the alleged benefits of fair trade:

  • The flawed design of the system undermines its own benefits: zero benefits in the long run.
  • For certification Fair trade imposes significant costs on impoverished growers
  • Fair trade attracts bad beans by making growers dump their bad beans into fair-trade channels.
  • Costs to growers imposed by restrictions on fertilizers and other inputs diminish yields.
  • Fair trade doesn’t help the poorest growers.
  • Relatively little fair-trade coffee originates from the poorest countries.
  • Purported social investments of the fair-trade system lack transparency.
  • The fair-trade system is inefficient at transferring coffee consumers’ goodwill to producers.
  • Direct trade is probably more efficient and sustainable than fair trade.
  • Artificially stimulating more coffee production keeps coffee growers poor, because overproduction makes the prices fall on the world markets.
  • Fair-trade coffee fails to address the root of poverty issues which aren't payment of producers but social, political and educational conditions.
  • Among the 16 best methods to fight poverty fair trade was the second but last with regard to cost efficiency.[44][45]

According to Colleen Haight from San Jose State University is in the fact that Fairtrade doesn't buy the complete production of a producer, making him sell his better products on the free market and passing on his lower quality goods to the fairtrade channel.[43][46]

References

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  7. ^ Raynolds, L. T. (2009). Mainstreaming Fair Trade Coffee: from Partnership to Traceability. World Development, 37 (6) 1083-1093, p. 1089; Valkila, J., Haaparanta, P., & Niemi, N. (2010). Empowering Coffee Traders? The Coffee Value Chain from Nicaraguan Fair Trade Farmers to Finnish Consumers. Journal of Business Ethics, 97:257-270 p. 264, Valkila, J. (2009). Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua - Sustainable development or a poverty trap? Ecological Economics, 68 3018-3025, pp. 3022-3; Reed, D. (2009). What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade? Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective. Journal of Business Ethics, 86:3-26, p. 12; Barrientos, S., Conroy, M. E., & Jones, E. (2007). Northern Social Movements and Fair Trade. In L. Raynolds, D. D. Murray, & J. Wilkinson, Fair Trade: The Challenges of Transforming Globalization (pp. 51–62). London and New York: Routledge. Quoted by Reed, D. (2009). What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade? Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective. Journal of Business Ethics, 86:3-26, p. 21.;de Janvry, A., McIntosh, C., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). Fair Trade and Free Entry: The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market. Retrieved December 24, 2012, from http://are.berkeley.edu/~alain/workingpapers.html.
  8. ^ Mohan, S. (2010). Fair Trade Without the Froth - a dispassionate economic analysis of 'Fair Trade'. London: Institute of Economic Affairs.; Kilian, B., Jones, C., Pratt, L., & Villalobos, A.: 2006, ‘Is Sustainable Agriculture a Viable Strategy to Improve Farm Income in Central America? A Case Study on Coffee’, Journal of Business Research, 59 (3), 322–330.; Berndt, C. E.: 2007, Is Fair Trade in coffee production fair and useful? Evidence from Costa Rica and Guatemala and implications for policy. Washington DC.: Mercatus 65 Policy Series, Policy Comment 11, Mercatus Centre, George Mason University.; Kohler, P. (2006), ‘The economics of Fair Trade: for whose benefit? An investigation into the limits of Fair Trade as a development tool and the risk of clean-washing’, HEI Working Papers 06–2007, Geneva: Economics Section, Graduate Institute of International Studies, October; Renard, M. C. and V. P. Grovas (2007), ‘Fair Trade coffee in Mexico: at the center of the debates’, ch. 9 in D. Murray, L. Raynolds and J. Wilkinson (eds), Fair Trade: The Challenges of Transforming Globalisation, London: Routledge. Pp 38-9; Riedel, C. P., F. M. Lopez, A. Widdows, A. Manji and M. Schneider (2005), ‘Impacts of Fair Trade: trade and market linkages’, Proceedings of the 18th International Farming Symposium, 31 October–3 November, Rome: Food and Agricultural Organisation, http://www.fao.org/ farmingsystems; Bacon, C. (2005), ‘Confronting the coffee crisis: can Fair Trade, organic and speciality coffee reduce small-scale farmer vulnerability in northern Nicaragua?’, World Development, 33(3): 497–511; Mohan, S. (2010). Fair Trade Without the Froth - a dispassionate economic analysis of 'Fair Trade'. London: Institute of Economic Affairs.
  9. ^ Weber, J. (2006). Rationing in the Fair Trade Coffee Market: Who enters and How? International colloquium on fair trade and sustainable development. Montreal: Ecole des Sciences de la Gestion, Universite du Quebec.; de Janvry, A., McIntosh, C., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). Fair Trade and Free Entry:The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market. Retrieved December 24, 2012, from http://are.berkeley.edu/~alain/workingpapers.html;Berndt 2013-12-15 at the Wayback Machine, C. E.: 2007, Is Fair Trade in coffee production fair and useful? Evidence from Costa Rica and Guatemala and implications for policy. Washington DC.: Mercatus 65 Policy Series, Policy Comment 11, Mercatus Centre, George Mason University.
  10. ^ Fairtrade International (FLO). (2011). Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations. Retrieved 15 January 2013, from (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-02. Retrieved 2013-02-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link); Fairtrade International (FLO). (2011). Fairtrade Standard for Coffee for Small Producer Organizations version: 1 April 2011. Retrieved 15 January 2013, from http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2009/standards/documents/2012-04-01_EN_SPO_Coffee.pdf; Fairtrade International. (2011). Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Trade Standard. Retrieved 15 January 2013, from http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2011-12-29_Explan_Doc_GTS_EN.pdf 2013-05-02 at the Wayback Machine; Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e.V. (2011). Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations, version: 01.05.2011_v1.1. Retrieved 15 January 2013, from http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2009/standards/documents/2012-07-11_SPO_EN.pdf; Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e.V. (2011). Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard. Retrieved 15 January 2013, from (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-02. Retrieved 2013-01-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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  15. ^ a b Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e.V. (2011) “Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard, p 16” (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-02. Retrieved 2013-01-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) accessed 15 January 2013
  16. ^ Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e.V. (2011), “Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations”, version: 01.05.2011_v1.1 http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2009/standards/documents/2012-07-11_SPO_EN.pdf accessed 15 January 2013; Fairtrade International (FLO) (2011?), “Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations” (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-02. Retrieved 2013-02-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) accessed 15 January 2013;
  17. ^ Fairtrade International, (2011)“Fairtrade standard for Hired Labour”, http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2011-12-29-HL_EN.pdf 2017-07-08 at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2013; Fairtrade International, 2011), (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-10. Retrieved 2013-01-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) accessed 23 January 2013
  18. ^ Fairtrade International, “Fairtrade standard for Contract Production” (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-10. Retrieved 2013-01-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) accessed 23 January 2013
  19. ^ Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e.V. (2011) “Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard,” (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-02. Retrieved 2013-01-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) accessed 15 January 2013; Fairtrade International, (2011) “Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Trade Standard http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2011-12-29_Explan_Doc_GTS_EN.pdf 2013-05-02 at the Wayback Machinehttp://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2011-12-29_Explan_Doc_GTS_EN.pdf 2013-05-02 at the Wayback Machine accessed 15 January 2013;
  20. ^ Weber, J. G. (2011). How much more do growers receive for Fair Trade organic coffee. Food Policy, 677-684.
  21. ^ Fairtrade International (2006). Standard Setting 2006-09-25 at the Wayback Machine. Accessed October 4, 2006.
  22. ^ Utting-Chamorro, K. (2005). Does Fairtrade make a difference? The case of small coffee producers in Nicaragua. Development in Practice, 15(3, 4); Moberg M (2005). "Fairtrade and Eastern Caribbean Banana Farmers: Rhetoric and Reality in the Anti-Globalization Movement.” Human Organization 64:4-16, Cited in Nelson and Pound (2009) p 10; Valkila, J.: 2009, ‘Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua - Sustainable development or a poverty trap?’ Ecological Economics, 68, p. 3023) Fraser (2009) cited in Griffiths, P. (2012), “Ethical Objections to Fairtrade”, Journal of Business Ethics (2012) 105:357–373 DOI 10.1007/s10551-011-0972-0 http://www.griffithsspeaker.com/Fairtrade/why_fair_trade_isn.htm, Accessed 2 February 2012
  23. ^ Fraser (2009) cited in Griffiths, P. (2012), “Ethical Objections to Fairtrade”, Journal of Business Ethics (2012) 105:357–373 DOI 10.1007/s10551-011-0972-0 http://www.griffithsspeaker.com/Fairtrade/why_fair_trade_isn.htm, Accessed 2 February 2012
  24. ^ Fairtrade International (FLO) (2011), “Fairtrade Standard for Coffee for Small Producer Organizations” version: 1 April 2011 http://www.fairtrade.net/fileadmin/user_upload/content/2009/standards/documents/2012-04-01_EN_SPO_Coffee.pdf accessed 15 January 2013; Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e.V. (2011), “Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations”, version: 01.05.2011_v1.1 p28; Fairtrade International. (2013). Coffee. Retrieved January 3, 2013, from Fairtrade International: http://www.fairtrade.net/coffee.html.
  25. ^ de Janvry, A., McIntosh, C., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). Fair Trade and Free Entry:The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market. Retrieved December 24, 2012, from http://are.berkeley.edu/~alain/workingpapers.html; Raynolds, L. T. (2009). Mainstreaming Fair Trade Coffee: from Partnership to Traceability. World Development, 37 (6) p. 1089); Valkila, J., Haaparanta, P., & Niemi, N. (2010). Empowering Coffee Traders? The Coffee Value Chain from Nicaraguan Fair Trade Farmers to Finnish Consumers. Journal of Business Ethics, 97: p264; Valkila, J. (2009). Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua – Sustainable development or a poverty trap? Ecological Economics, 68 3018-3025; Reed, D. (2009). What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade? Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective. Journal of Business Ethics, 86:3-26; Valkila, J. (2009). Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua – Sustainable development or a poverty trap? Ecological Economics, 68 pp. 3022-3); Barrientos, S., Conroy, M. E., & Jones, E. (2007). Northern Social Movements and Fair Trade. In L. Raynolds, D. D. Murray, & J. Wilkinson, Fair Trade: The Challenges of Transforming Globalization (pp. 51–62). London and New York: Routledge; Mendoza, R. (2000). The hierarchical legacy in coffee commodity chains. In R. Ruben, & J. Bastiaensen, Rural development in Central America. New York: St. Martin’s Press, p.34–9; Mendoza, R., & J. Bastiaensen, J. (2003). Fair Trade and the Coffee Crisis in the Nicaraguan Segovias. Small Enterprise Development, 14(2), p. 42; Moore, G., Gibbon, J., & Slack, R. (2006). The mainstreaming of Fair Trade: a macromarketing perspective. Journal of Strategic Marketing, 14 329-352; Reed, D. (2009). What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade? Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective. Journal of Business Ethics, 86: p. 12).
  26. ^ de Janvry, A., McIntosh, C., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). Fair Trade and Free Entry:The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market. Retrieved December 24, 2012, from http://are.berkeley.edu/~alain/workingpapers.html.
  27. ^ a b FLO-CERT Gmbh, (2011) “. (2011). Fee System Small Producer Organization - Explanatory Document. Retrieved January 3, 2013, from http://www.flo-cert.net: http://www.flo-cert.net/flo-cert/35.html 2013-01-29 at the Wayback Machine.
  28. ^ a b Hamel, I.: 2006, 'Fairtrade Firm Accused of Foul Play', Swiss Info http://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/Fair_trade_firm_accused_of_foul_play.html?cid=5351232 23 December 2009.
  29. ^ Weitzman, H. (2006, August 9). ‘Fair’ coffee workers paid below minimum wage. Financial Times; Weitzman, H. (2006, September 9). ‘'Ethical-coffee’ workers paid below legal minimum. Financial Times.
  30. ^ a b Weitzman, H.: 2006, The bitter cost of ‘Fair Trade’ coffee. Financial Times, September 8."FT.com / Americas - The bitter cost of 'fair trade' coffee". Financial Times. 8 September 2006. Archived from the original on 2022-12-11.
  31. ^ Valkila, J.: 2009, 'Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua - Sustainable development or a poverty trap?' Ecological Economics, 68, 3018-3025.
  32. ^ Reed, D.: 2009, 'What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade? Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective', Journal of Business Ethics, 86, 3-26. p. 12
  33. ^ Moore, G., Gibbon, J., & Slack, R.: 2006, 'The mainstreaming of Fair Trade: a macromarketing perspective’, Journal of Strategic Marketing, 14, 329-352.
  34. ^ Muradian, R., and W. Pelupessy. 2005. "Governing the Coffee Chain: The Role of Voluntary Regulatory Systems” World Development 33(12): 2029-2044., cited in de Janvry, A., McIntosh, C., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). Fair Trade and Free Entry: The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market. Retrieved December 24, 2012, from http://are.berkeley.edu/~alain/workingpapers.html.
  35. ^ Levi, Margaret, and April Linton. 2003. “Fair Trade: A Cup at a Time?” Politics and Society 31(3): 407-32. cited in de Janvry, A., McIntosh, C., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). Fair Trade and Free Entry: The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market. Retrieved December 24, 2012, from http://are.berkeley.edu/~alain/workingpapers.html.
  36. ^ a b c Weber, J. (2006), ‘Rationing in the Fair Trade coffee market: who enters and how?’, Paper presented at the ‘Second International Colloquium: Fair Trade and Sustainable Development’, University of Quebec, Montreal, 19–21 June
  37. ^ Riedel, C. P., F. M. Lopez, A. Widdows, A. Manji and M. Schneider (2005), ‘Impacts of Fair Trade: trade and market linkages’, Proceedings of the 18th International Farming Symposium, 31 October–3 November, Rome: Food and Agricultural Organisation, http://www.fao.org/ farmingsystems
  38. ^ de Janvry, A., McIntosh, C., & Sadoulet, E. (2010). Fair Trade and Free Entry:The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market. Retrieved December 24, 2012, from http://are.berkeley.edu/~alain/workingpapers.html
  39. ^ e.g. Utting-Chamorro, K (2005). Does Fairtrade make a difference? The case of small coffee producers in Nicaragua. Development in Practice, Volume 15, Numbers 3 and 4, June 2005, Berndt, C. E. (2007). Is Fair Trade in coffee production fair and useful? Evidence from Costa Rica and Guatemala and implications for policy. Washington DC.: Mercatus 65 Policy Series, Policy Comment 11, Mercatus Centre, George Mason University.),
  40. ^ Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e.V. (2011) “Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard,” p11 (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-05-02. Retrieved 2013-01-15.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) accessed 15 January 2013
  41. ^ Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International (2006). The Certification Mark. URL accessed on November 27, 2008.
  42. ^ TransFair USA FAQ - "Some LIs, including TransFair USA, have elected to continue using their current labels."
  43. ^ a b "Fairtrade: Keine langfristig positiven Effekte", Die Zeit (in German), Hamburg, ISSN 0044-2070
  44. ^ "Cost-Effective Compassion: The 10 Most Popular Strategies for Helping the Poor". ChristianityToday.com (in German). Retrieved 2016-06-18.
  45. ^ University of San Francisco; author Bruce Wydick Professor of economics and international studies (2014-08-07). "10 Reasons Fair-Trade Coffee Doesn't Work". The Huffington Post (in German). Retrieved 2016-06-18. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  46. ^ "The Problem with Fair Trade Coffee (SSIR)". ssir.org (in German). Retrieved 2016-06-18.

External links

  • Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International

international, fairtrade, certification, mark, this, strong, claims, like, must, come, from, should, referenced, qualified, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, mater. This Strong claims like must come from should be referenced and qualified needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources International Fairtrade Certification Mark news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message The International Fairtrade Certification Mark is an independent certification mark used in over 50 countries It appears on products as an independent guarantee that a product has been produced according to Fairtrade political standards International Fairtrade Certification MarkThe International Fairtrade Certification MarkCertifying agencyFairtrade InternationalEffective since2002 21 years ago 2002 Product categoryVariousThe Fairtrade Mark is owned and protected by Fairtrade International FLO on behalf of its 25 member and associate member Fairtrade producer networks and labelling initiatives For a product to carry the Fairtrade Mark it must come from FLOCert inspected and certified producer organizations The crops must be marketed in accordance with the International Fairtrade standards set by Fairtrade International The supply chain is also monitored by FLOCert 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 organisations in more than 50 countries in Africa Asia and Latin America 1 In the Fair trade debate there are many complaints of failure to enforce these standards with Fairtrade cooperatives importers and packers profiting by evading them 2 As of 2006 the following products currently carry the Fairtrade Mark coffee tea chocolate cocoa sugar bananas apples pears grapes plums lemons oranges Satsumas clementines lychees avocados pineapples mangoes fruit juices quinoa peppers green beans coconut dried fruit rooibos tea green tea cakes and biscuits honey muesli cereal bars jams chutney and sauces herbs and spices nuts and nut oil wine beer rum flowers footballs rice yogurt baby food sugar body scrub cotton wool and cotton products 3 Contents 1 How it works 2 Fairtrade pricing 3 Fairtrade inspection and certification 4 Costs and returns 5 History 6 Criticism 7 References 8 External linksHow it works EditThe 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 4 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 5 Retailers and cafes in the rich countries can sell Fairtrade coffee at any price they like so nearly all the extra price paid by consumers 82 to 99 is kept in the rich countries as increased profit 6 There is however evidence that dishonest importers do not pay the full Fairtrade price so an even smaller proportion reaches the Third World 7 Cooperative traders and exporters can sell coffee as Fairtrade certified if they meet the political standards of FLO and they pay a certification and inspection fee Other administration costs and production costs are incurred to meet these standards The exporter not the farmer is paid a minimum price for Fairtrade certified coffee when the world market is oversupplied and a Fairtrade premium of 15c per lb at other times 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 8 As the additional costs are incurred on all production not just that sold as Fairtrade cooperatives sometimes lose money on their Fairtrade membership 9 After the additional costs have been subtracted from the Fairtrade price the rest goes on Social Projects such as clinics women s groups and baseball pitches Farmers do not get any of the higher price under Fairtrade 10 Nor is there any evidence that they get higher prices as a result of better marketing the cooperatives sometimes pay farmers a higher price than farmers do sometimes less but there is no evidence on which is more common 11 Farmers do however incur extra costs in producing Fairtrade so they certainly do lose money from Fairtrade membership in some cases There is little or no research on the extra costs incurred or the effect of Fairtrade membership on the income of farmers Disambiguation 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 12 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 13 The word is used in all these meanings in key documents 14 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 15 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 halfway up the marketing chain between the farmer and the consumer 15 The part of the standards referring to cultivation environment pesticides and child labour has the farmer as producer The part referring to democratic organization has the primary cooperative as producer Fairtrade Standards contain minimum requirements that all producer organisations must meet to become certified as well as progress requirements in which producers must demonstrate improvements over time There are several types of Fairtrade Standards Standards for small farmers organizations 16 standards for hired labour situations 17 standards for contract situations 18 and standards for trade importers 19 and there are also standards for the different products Fairtrade Standards for small farmers organizations include requirements for democratic decision making ensuring that producers have a say in how the Fairtrade Premiums are invested etc They also include requirements for capacity building and economic strengthening of the organization Fairtrade Standards for hired labour situations ensure that employees receive minimum wages and bargain collectively Fairtrade certified plantations must also ensure that there is no forced or child labour and that health and safety requirements are met These labor standards do not apply to Fairtrade small farmer cooperatives though some have an average of 2 39 ha per farmer of just one crop coffee with some single farmers having more than 23 ha coffee implying substantial use of hired labor 20 In a hired labour situation Fairtrade Standards require a joint body to be set up with representatives from both the management and the employees This joint body decides on how Fairtrade Premiums will be spent to benefit plantation employees For some products such as coffee only Fairtrade Standards for small farmers organizations are applicable For others such as tea both small farmers organizations and plantations can be certified Trade standards cover the payment of premiums of minimum prices where applicable the provision of credit to buy the crop and commercial relationships between the exporting cooperative or other organization and the importer Typically in order for a product to be marked as Fair trade at least 20 of its mass must be made up of a Fairtrade product Fairtrade Standards and procedures are approved by the Fairtrade International Standards Committee an external committee comprising all FLO stakeholders labeling initiatives producers and traders and external experts Fairtrade Standards are set by FLO in accordance to the requirements of the ISEAL Code of Good Practice in standard setting and are in addition the result of a consultation process involving a variety of stakeholders producers traders external experts inspectors certification staff etc 21 There are however criticisms of the standards There have been complaints that Fairtrade standards are inappropriate and may harm producers sometimes imposing months of additional work for little return 22 There have also been complaints that standards set by a small committee of activists in the rich north have been imposed on poor farmers in the Third World Fraser suggests that they are a rag bag of requirements imposed without thought of what is to be achieved or how 23 Fairtrade pricing EditThe main aspects of the Fairtrade system are the Minimum Price and the Premium These are paid to the exporting firm usually a second tier cooperative not to the farmer They are not paid for everything produced by the cooperative members but for that proportion of13their output they are able to sell with the brand Fairtrade Certified typically 17 to as much as 60 of their turnover The Fairtrade Premium is an extra payment over the market price e g an extra 20c lb for coffee which is paid to the exporting organization The residual after extra costs have been met must be spent on social projects for social and economic development in the producing communities rather than being given to farmers as extra payment 24 The producers themselves decide how these funds are to be spent They are generally used for improvements in health education or other social facilities although it may also be used for certain development projects to enable farmers to improve productivity or reduce their reliance on single commodities As part of the Fairtrade criteria registered producers are accountable to FLOCert for the use of this money The Fairtrade Minimum Price is a guaranteed price to be paid for a few products like coffee when the world prices collapse Again it would usually be spent on social projects rather than going to the farmers There are complaints that the standards relating to paying of price premiums minimum prices provision of credit etc by importers in rich countries are not enforced 25 In particular importers can demand to get a higher quality at the same official Fairtrade price or withhold other services threatening to buy from another Fairtrade supplier if the exporter did not agree to this kickback or if the supplier complains that a kickback is demanded De Janvry McIntosh and Sadoulet 26 have quantified this for a large group of Fairtrade coffee cooperatives in South America over a dozen years They found that this kickback was 10c a pound over a period when the official price premium was 5c or 10c a pound and this plus the certification fee meant that the cooperatives made a loss in years when a premium was payable and were paid substantially less than the official minimum prices in years when a minimum price was payable These should have been identified and rectified by the certification agency Fairtrade inspection and certification EditFairtrade inspection and certification are carried out for a fee 27 by FLOCert an independent for profit body created by Fairtrade International in 2004 FLO CERT certifies that both producers and traders have met with Fairtrade Standards and that producers have invested any surplus received through Fairtrade in social projects FLO CERT works with a network of around 100 independent inspectors that regularly visit producer and trade organizations and report back to FLO CERT All certification decisions are then taken by a Certification Committee composed of stakeholders from producers traders national labelling organisations and external experts An Appeals Committee handles all appeals FLO CERT inspections and certification follow the international ISO standards for product certification bodies ISO 65 There have been claims that adherence to fair trade standards by producers has been poor and that enforcement of standards by Fairtrade is very weak notably by Christian Jacquiau 28 and by Paola Ghillani who spent four years as president of Fairtrade Labelling Organizations 28 There is criticism of poor enforcement labourers on Fairtrade farms in Peru are paid less than the minimum wage 29 some non Fairtrade coffee is sold as Fairtrade 30 the standards are not very strict in the case of seasonally hired labour in coffee production 31 some fair trade standards are not strictly enforced 32 and supermarkets may avoid their responsibility 33 In 2006 a Financial Times journalist found that ten out of the ten mills they visited had sold uncertified coffee to co operatives as certified It reported that they were also handed evidence of at least one coffee association that received Fairtrade certification despite illegally growing some 20 per cent of its coffee in protected national forest land 30 Costs and returns EditFairtrade farmers and marketing organizations incur a wide range of costs in achieving and maintaining certification They incur these costs on all their production but they can only recover costs on the small part of their production that they can sell as Fairtrade certified In practice they can sell only small of their output as Fairtrade because of lack of demand and must sell the rest as uncertified at world prices For example there is not enough demand to take all the certified coffee produced so most has to be sold as uncertified In 2001 only 13 6 could be sold as certified 34 so limits were placed on new cooperatives joining the scheme This plus an increased demand put up sales of certified to around 50 in 2003 35 with a figure of 37 commonly cited in recent years Some exporting cooperatives do not manage to sell any of their output as certified 36 and others sell as little as 8 37 Weber 36 reports cooperatives not able to cover the extra costs of a marketing team for Fairtrade with one covering only 70 of these costs after six years of Fairtrade membership Certified organizations such as cooperatives have to pay FLOCert a fee to become certified and a further annual fee for audit and continued certification Fairtrade inspection and certification are carried out for a fee 27 The first year certification fee per unit sold as Fairtrade certified varies but has been over 6c lb with an annual fee of 3c lb to 3 4c b for coffee up to 2006 in some countries at a time when the Fairtrade premium was 5c to 10c lb 38 The cooperative or other certified organization has to spend money on conforming to the standards with changed employment practices the introduction and administration of the required democratic processes changed processing labelling and packing changed material They also incur extra costs in selling Weber 36 reports cooperatives not able to cover the extra costs of a marketing team for Fairtrade with one covering only 70 of these costs after six years of Fairtrade membership It is generally agreed that some organizations make a loss from their Fairtrade certification 39 but there are very few economic studies showing what happened to the money Fairtrade farmers also have to meet a large range of criteria on production there are limits on using child labour pesticides herbicides genetically modified products etc 40 These cost money mean that the farmers have to do more work in the hot sun and that they have to hire labour instead of using family labour In times when world prices are so low that there is no social premium and the minimum price is paid some farmers have negotiated that some of the money is paid to them rather than being used for social projects History EditFairtrade labelled coffee the first Fairtrade labelled product was first launched in the Netherlands in 1988 The label launched by Nico Roozen and Dutch missionary Frans van der Hoff was then called Max Havelaar after a fictional Dutch character who opposed the exploitation of coffee pickers in Dutch colonies Fairtrade labelling allowed Fairtrade Certified goods to be sold outside the World shops for the first time and into mainstream retailers reaching a larger consumer segment and boosting sales significantly The concept caught on in the ensuing years similar non profit Fairtrade labelling organizations were set up in other European countries and North America called Max Havelaar in Belgium Switzerland Denmark Norway and France Transfair in Germany Luxembourg Austria Italy the United States Canada and Japan or carrying a national name Fairtrade Mark in the UK and Ireland Rattvisemarkt in Sweden and Reilu Kauppa in Finland Initially the Max Havelaars and the Transfairs each had their own Fairtrade standards product committees and monitoring systems In 1994 a process of convergence among the labelling organizations or LIs for Labelling Initiatives started with the establishment of a TransMax working group culminating in 1997 in the creation of Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International now known simply as Fairtrade 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 a new Fairtrade Certification Mark The goals of the launch were to improve the visibility of the Mark on supermarket shelves convey a dynamic forward looking image for Fairtrade facilitate cross border trade and simplify procedures for importers and traders The Fairtrade Mark harmonization process is still under way as of March 2011 all but two labelling initiatives dubious discuss TransFair USA and TransFair Canada have fully adopted the new international Certification Mark 41 These two organizations currently use the Fair Trade Certified Mark however Canadian organization began actively promoting the new international Certification Mark in 2010 as part of a total transition toward it TransFair USA has apparently elected to continue with its own mark for the time being 42 At present over 19 FLO Member Labelling Initiatives are using the International Fairtrade Certification Mark There are now Fairtrade Certification Marks 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 and footballs etc 3 Criticism EditAccording to the economist Bruce Wydick with the median coffee drinker willing to pay a premium of 50 cents for a cup of fair trade coffee even in the best case scenario for fair trade when world prices are at their lowest the maximum amount a fair trade grower from that same cup of coffee would receive is only one third of a cent 43 Wydick lists his points against the alleged benefits of fair trade The flawed design of the system undermines its own benefits zero benefits in the long run For certification Fair trade imposes significant costs on impoverished growers Fair trade attracts bad beans by making growers dump their bad beans into fair trade channels Costs to growers imposed by restrictions on fertilizers and other inputs diminish yields Fair trade doesn t help the poorest growers Relatively little fair trade coffee originates from the poorest countries Purported social investments of the fair trade system lack transparency The fair trade system is inefficient at transferring coffee consumers goodwill to producers Direct trade is probably more efficient and sustainable than fair trade Artificially stimulating more coffee production keeps coffee growers poor because overproduction makes the prices fall on the world markets Fair trade coffee fails to address the root of poverty issues which aren t payment of producers but social political and educational conditions Among the 16 best methods to fight poverty fair trade was the second but last with regard to cost efficiency 44 45 According to Colleen Haight from San Jose State University is in the fact that Fairtrade doesn t buy the complete production of a producer making him sell his better products on the free market and passing on his lower quality goods to the fairtrade channel 43 46 References Edit FLO CERT 2008 FLO CERT Archived 2009 09 18 at the Wayback Machine URL accessed on August 1 2008 Raynolds L T 2009 Mainstreaming Fair Trade Coffee from Partnership to Traceability World Development 37 6 p1089 Valkila J Haaparanta P amp Niemi N 2010 Empowering Coffee Traders The Coffee Value Chain from Nicaraguan Fair Trade Farmers to Finnish Consumers Journal of Business Ethics 97 p264 Valkila J 2009 Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua Sustainable development or a poverty trap Ecological Economics 68 3018 3025 Utting K 2009 Assessing the impact of Fair Trade Coffee Towards an Integrative Framework Journal of Business Ethics 86 p139 Valkila J 2009 Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua Sustainable development or a poverty trap Ecological Economics 68 3022 3023 Reed D 2009 What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective Journal of Business Ethics 86 pp 12 21 Mohan S 2010 Fair Trade Without the Froth a dispassionate economic analysis of Fair Trade London Institute of Economic Affairs e g p67 Kohler P 2006 The economics of Fair Trade for whose benefit An investigation into the limits of Fair Trade as a development tool and the risk of clean washing HEI Working Papers 06 2007 Geneva Economics Section Graduate Institute of International Studies October Jacquiau C 2006 Les Coulisees du Commerce Equitable Paris Mille et Une Nuits Jacquiau C 2007 Max Havelaar ou les ambiguites du commerce equitable Pourquoi le Sud rue dans les brancards Monde Diplomatique September Hamel I 2006 Fairtrade Firm Accused of Foul Play Swiss Info http www swissinfo ch eng Fair trade firm accused of foul play html cid 5351232 23 December 2009 Weitzman H 2006 August 9 Fair coffee workers paid below minimum wage Financial Times Weitzman H 2006 September 9 Ethical coffee workers paid below legal minimum Financial Times Weitzman H 2006 The bitter cost of Fair Trade coffee Financial Times September 8 Reed D 2009 What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective Journal of Business Ethics 86 p12 Moore G Gibbon J amp Slack R 2006 The mainstreaming of Fair Trade a macromarketing perspective Journal of Strategic Marketing 14 329 352 a b Fairtrade International 2011 Products URL accessed on August 24 2011 Davies I A and A Crane Ethical Decision Making in Fair Trade Companies Journal of Business Ethics 45 79 92 2003 P84 Mohan S 2010 Fair Trade Without the Froth a dispassionate economic analysis of Fair Trade London Institute of Economic Affairs Kilian B Jones C Pratt L amp Villalobos A 2006 Is Sustainable Agriculture a Viable Strategy to Improve Farm Income in Central America A Case Study on Coffee Journal of Business Research 59 3 322 330 Berndt C E 2007 Is Fair Trade in coffee production fair and useful Evidence from Costa Rica and Guatemala and implications for policy Washington DC Mercatus 65 Policy Series Policy Comment 11 Mercatus Centre George Mason University Riedel C P F M Lopez A Widdows A Manji and M Schneider 2005 Impacts of Fair Trade trade and market linkages Proceedings of the 18th International Farming Symposium 31 October 3 November Rome Food and Agricultural Organisation http www fao org farmingsystems Kohler P 2006 The economics of Fair Trade for whose benefit An investigation into the limits of Fair Trade as a development tool and the risk of clean washing HEI Working Papers 06 2007 Geneva Economics Section Graduate Institute of International Studies October Griffiths P Ethical objections to Fairtrade Journal of Business Ethics July 2011 DOI 10 1007 s10551 011 0972 0 www springerlink com Accessed at http www griffithsspeaker com Fairtrade why fair trade isn htm Valkila Archived 2013 09 25 at the Wayback Machine J Haaparanta P amp Niemi N 2010 Empowering Coffee Traders The Coffee Value Chain from Nicaraguan Fair Trade Farmers to Finnish Consumers Journal of Business Ethics 97 257 270 Kilian B Jones C Pratt L amp Villalobos A 2006 Is Sustainable Agriculture a Viable Strategy to Improve Farm Income in Central America A Case Study on Coffee Journal of Business Research 59 3 322 330 Mendoza R amp J Bastiaensen J 2003 Fair Trade and the Coffee Crisis in the Nicaraguan Segovias Small Enterprise Development 14 2 36 46 Raynolds L T 2009 Mainstreaming Fair Trade Coffee from Partnership to Traceability World Development 37 6 1083 1093 p 1089 Valkila J Haaparanta P amp Niemi N 2010 Empowering Coffee Traders The Coffee Value Chain from Nicaraguan Fair Trade Farmers to Finnish Consumers Journal of Business Ethics 97 257 270 p 264 Valkila J 2009 Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua Sustainable development or a poverty trap Ecological Economics 68 3018 3025 pp 3022 3 Reed D 2009 What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective Journal of Business Ethics 86 3 26 p 12 Barrientos S Conroy M E amp Jones E 2007 Northern Social Movements and Fair Trade In L Raynolds D D Murray amp J Wilkinson Fair Trade The Challenges of Transforming Globalization pp 51 62 London and New York Routledge Quoted by Reed D 2009 What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective Journal of Business Ethics 86 3 26 p 21 de Janvry A McIntosh C amp Sadoulet E 2010 Fair Trade and Free Entry The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market Retrieved December 24 2012 from http are berkeley edu alain workingpapers html Mohan S 2010 Fair Trade Without the Froth a dispassionate economic analysis of Fair Trade London Institute of Economic Affairs Kilian B Jones C Pratt L amp Villalobos A 2006 Is Sustainable Agriculture a Viable Strategy to Improve Farm Income in Central America A Case Study on Coffee Journal of Business Research 59 3 322 330 Berndt C E 2007 Is Fair Trade in coffee production fair and useful Evidence from Costa Rica and Guatemala and implications for policy Washington DC Mercatus 65 Policy Series Policy Comment 11 Mercatus Centre George Mason University Kohler P 2006 The economics of Fair Trade for whose benefit An investigation into the limits of Fair Trade as a development tool and the risk of clean washing HEI Working Papers 06 2007 Geneva Economics Section Graduate Institute of International Studies October Renard M C and V P Grovas 2007 Fair Trade coffee in Mexico at the center of the debates ch 9 in D Murray L Raynolds and J Wilkinson eds Fair Trade The Challenges of Transforming Globalisation London Routledge Pp 38 9 Riedel C P F M Lopez A Widdows A Manji and M Schneider 2005 Impacts of Fair Trade trade and market linkages Proceedings of the 18th International Farming Symposium 31 October 3 November Rome Food and Agricultural Organisation http www fao org farmingsystems Bacon C 2005 Confronting the coffee crisis can Fair Trade organic and speciality coffee reduce small scale farmer vulnerability in northern Nicaragua World Development 33 3 497 511 Mohan S 2010 Fair Trade Without the Froth a dispassionate economic analysis of Fair Trade London Institute of Economic Affairs Weber J 2006 Rationing in the Fair Trade Coffee Market Who enters and How International colloquium on fair trade and sustainable development Montreal Ecole des Sciences de la Gestion Universite du Quebec de Janvry A McIntosh C amp Sadoulet E 2010 Fair Trade and Free Entry The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market Retrieved December 24 2012 from http are berkeley edu alain workingpapers html Berndt Archived 2013 12 15 at the Wayback Machine C E 2007 Is Fair Trade in coffee production fair and useful Evidence from Costa Rica and Guatemala and implications for policy Washington DC Mercatus 65 Policy Series Policy Comment 11 Mercatus Centre George Mason University Fairtrade International FLO 2011 Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations Retrieved 15 January 2013 from Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 02 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Fairtrade International FLO 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Coffee for Small Producer Organizations version 1 April 2011 Retrieved 15 January 2013 from http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 04 01 EN SPO Coffee pdf Fairtrade International 2011 Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Trade Standard Retrieved 15 January 2013 from http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2011 12 29 Explan Doc GTS EN pdf Archived 2013 05 02 at the Wayback Machine Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations version 01 05 2011 v1 1 Retrieved 15 January 2013 from http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 07 11 SPO EN pdf Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard Retrieved 15 January 2013 from Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 01 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Griffiths P Ethical objections to Fairtrade Journal of Business Ethics July 2011 DOI 10 1007 s10551 011 0972 0 www springerlink com Accessed at http www griffithsspeaker com Fairtrade why fair trade isn htm Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations version 01 05 2011 v1 1 p 5 http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 07 11 SPO EN pdf accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard p11 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 01 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations version 01 05 2011 v1 1 http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 07 11 SPO EN pdf accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade International FLO 2011 Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 02 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 01 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade International 2011 Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Trade Standard http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2011 12 29 Explan Doc GTS EN pdf Archived 2013 05 02 at the Wayback Machine http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2011 12 29 Explan Doc GTS EN pdf Archived 2013 05 02 at the Wayback Machine accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade International FLO 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Coffee for Small Producer Organizations version 1 April 2011 http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 04 01 EN SPO Coffee pdf accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade International 2011 Fairtrade standard for Hired Labour http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2011 12 29 HL EN pdf Archived 2017 07 08 at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2013 Fairtrade International 2011 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 10 Retrieved 2013 01 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 23 January 2013 Fairtrade International Fairtrade standard for Contract Production http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 09 25 CP EN pdfaccessed 23 January 2013 a b Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard p 16 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 01 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations version 01 05 2011 v1 1 http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 07 11 SPO EN pdf accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade International FLO 2011 Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 02 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade International 2011 Fairtrade standard for Hired Labour http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2011 12 29 HL EN pdf Archived 2017 07 08 at the Wayback Machine accessed 23 January 2013 Fairtrade International 2011 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 10 Retrieved 2013 01 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 23 January 2013 Fairtrade International Fairtrade standard for Contract Production Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 10 Retrieved 2013 01 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 23 January 2013 Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 01 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade International 2011 Explanatory Document for the Fairtrade Trade Standard http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2011 12 29 Explan Doc GTS EN pdf Archived 2013 05 02 at the Wayback Machine http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2011 12 29 Explan Doc GTS EN pdf Archived 2013 05 02 at the Wayback Machine accessed 15 January 2013 Weber J G 2011 How much more do growers receive for Fair Trade organic coffee Food Policy 677 684 Fairtrade International 2006 Standard Setting Archived 2006 09 25 at the Wayback Machine Accessed October 4 2006 Utting Chamorro K 2005 Does Fairtrade make a difference The case of small coffee producers in Nicaragua Development in Practice 15 3 4 Moberg M 2005 Fairtrade and Eastern Caribbean Banana Farmers Rhetoric and Reality in the Anti Globalization Movement Human Organization 64 4 16 Cited in Nelson and Pound 2009 p 10 Valkila J 2009 Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua Sustainable development or a poverty trap Ecological Economics 68 p 3023 Fraser 2009 cited in Griffiths P 2012 Ethical Objections to Fairtrade Journal of Business Ethics 2012 105 357 373 DOI 10 1007 s10551 011 0972 0 http www griffithsspeaker com Fairtrade why fair trade isn htm Accessed 2 February 2012 Fraser 2009 cited in Griffiths P 2012 Ethical Objections to Fairtrade Journal of Business Ethics 2012 105 357 373 DOI 10 1007 s10551 011 0972 0 http www griffithsspeaker com Fairtrade why fair trade isn htm Accessed 2 February 2012 Fairtrade International FLO 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Coffee for Small Producer Organizations version 1 April 2011 http www fairtrade net fileadmin user upload content 2009 standards documents 2012 04 01 EN SPO Coffee pdf accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Fairtrade Standard for Small Producer Organizations version 01 05 2011 v1 1 p28 Fairtrade International 2013 Coffee Retrieved January 3 2013 from Fairtrade International http www fairtrade net coffee html de Janvry A McIntosh C amp Sadoulet E 2010 Fair Trade and Free Entry The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market Retrieved December 24 2012 from http are berkeley edu alain workingpapers html Raynolds L T 2009 Mainstreaming Fair Trade Coffee from Partnership to Traceability World Development 37 6 p 1089 Valkila J Haaparanta P amp Niemi N 2010 Empowering Coffee Traders The Coffee Value Chain from Nicaraguan Fair Trade Farmers to Finnish Consumers Journal of Business Ethics 97 p264 Valkila J 2009 Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua Sustainable development or a poverty trap Ecological Economics 68 3018 3025 Reed D 2009 What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective Journal of Business Ethics 86 3 26 Valkila J 2009 Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua Sustainable development or a poverty trap Ecological Economics 68 pp 3022 3 Barrientos S Conroy M E amp Jones E 2007 Northern Social Movements and Fair Trade In L Raynolds D D Murray amp J Wilkinson Fair Trade The Challenges of Transforming Globalization pp 51 62 London and New York Routledge Mendoza R 2000 The hierarchical legacy in coffee commodity chains In R Ruben amp J Bastiaensen Rural development in Central America New York St Martin s Press p 34 9 Mendoza R amp J Bastiaensen J 2003 Fair Trade and the Coffee Crisis in the Nicaraguan Segovias Small Enterprise Development 14 2 p 42 Moore G Gibbon J amp Slack R 2006 The mainstreaming of Fair Trade a macromarketing perspective Journal of Strategic Marketing 14 329 352 Reed D 2009 What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective Journal of Business Ethics 86 p 12 de Janvry A McIntosh C amp Sadoulet E 2010 Fair Trade and Free Entry The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market Retrieved December 24 2012 from http are berkeley edu alain workingpapers html a b FLO CERT Gmbh 2011 2011 Fee System Small Producer Organization Explanatory Document Retrieved January 3 2013 from http www flo cert net http www flo cert net flo cert 35 html Archived 2013 01 29 at the Wayback Machine a b Hamel I 2006 Fairtrade Firm Accused of Foul Play Swiss Info http www swissinfo ch eng Fair trade firm accused of foul play html cid 5351232 23 December 2009 Weitzman H 2006 August 9 Fair coffee workers paid below minimum wage Financial Times Weitzman H 2006 September 9 Ethical coffee workers paid below legal minimum Financial Times a b Weitzman H 2006 The bitter cost of Fair Trade coffee Financial Times September 8 FT com Americas The bitter cost of fair trade coffee Financial Times 8 September 2006 Archived from the original on 2022 12 11 Valkila J 2009 Fair Trade organic coffee production in Nicaragua Sustainable development or a poverty trap Ecological Economics 68 3018 3025 Reed D 2009 What do Corporations have to do with Fair Trade Positive and normative analysis from a value chain perspective Journal of Business Ethics 86 3 26 p 12 Moore G Gibbon J amp Slack R 2006 The mainstreaming of Fair Trade a macromarketing perspective Journal of Strategic Marketing 14 329 352 Muradian R and W Pelupessy 2005 Governing the Coffee Chain The Role of Voluntary Regulatory Systems World Development 33 12 2029 2044 cited in de Janvry A McIntosh C amp Sadoulet E 2010 Fair Trade and Free Entry The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market Retrieved December 24 2012 from http are berkeley edu alain workingpapers html Levi Margaret and April Linton 2003 Fair Trade A Cup at a Time Politics and Society 31 3 407 32 cited in de Janvry A McIntosh C amp Sadoulet E 2010 Fair Trade and Free Entry The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market Retrieved December 24 2012 from http are berkeley edu alain workingpapers html a b c Weber J 2006 Rationing in the Fair Trade coffee market who enters and how Paper presented at the Second International Colloquium Fair Trade and Sustainable Development University of Quebec Montreal 19 21 June Riedel C P F M Lopez A Widdows A Manji and M Schneider 2005 Impacts of Fair Trade trade and market linkages Proceedings of the 18th International Farming Symposium 31 October 3 November Rome Food and Agricultural Organisation http www fao org farmingsystems de Janvry A McIntosh C amp Sadoulet E 2010 Fair Trade and Free Entry The Dissipation of Producer Benefits in a Disequilibrium Market Retrieved December 24 2012 from http are berkeley edu alain workingpapers html e g Utting Chamorro K 2005 Does Fairtrade make a difference The case of small coffee producers in Nicaragua Development in Practice Volume 15 Numbers 3 and 4 June 2005 Berndt C E 2007 Is Fair Trade in coffee production fair and useful Evidence from Costa Rica and Guatemala and implications for policy Washington DC Mercatus 65 Policy Series Policy Comment 11 Mercatus Centre George Mason University Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International e V 2011 Generic Fairtrade Trade Standard p11 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2013 05 02 Retrieved 2013 01 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link accessed 15 January 2013 Fairtrade Labelling Organizations International 2006 The Certification Mark URL accessed on November 27 2008 TransFair USA FAQ Some LIs including TransFair USA have elected to continue using their current labels a b Fairtrade Keine langfristig positiven Effekte Die Zeit in German Hamburg ISSN 0044 2070 Cost Effective Compassion The 10 Most Popular Strategies for Helping the Poor ChristianityToday com in German Retrieved 2016 06 18 University of San Francisco author Bruce Wydick Professor of economics and international studies 2014 08 07 10 Reasons Fair Trade Coffee Doesn t Work The Huffington Post in German Retrieved 2016 06 18 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The Problem with Fair Trade Coffee SSIR ssir org in German Retrieved 2016 06 18 External links EditFairtrade Labelling Organizations International Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title International Fairtrade Certification Mark amp oldid 1136535559, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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