“What exactly is fair trade?” You might hear someone ask
commonly, “Why should I care about it?”
At least I’ve been asked such a thing multiple times. It’s a
fair question, and definitely one that a vastly larger amount of consumers need
to know the answer to. Fairtrade practices arise in socially driven consumer
habits that call for more sustainable and also ethical working conditions for
farmers and workers of ingredients in every-day products. This provides for a
plethora of necessary human rights (redundant, sorry) and also creates safe
working environments for members of communities, particularly in developing
countries.
The Logo to Look For http://ecoscene.info.yorku.ca/files/2013/07/fairtrade.png |
It allows for safety in industries where children are a major
fraction of the work force and also creates protected relationships between
industry and actual workers. As a result, fewer workers world-wide have been
diagnosed with diseases or sustained injuries from work-related matters. These
results stem from the Fairtrade Organization and its relationship with farming
cultures and communities and their efforts to ensure and adhere to sustainable
and safe cultivation and production methods. Not only this, but equally
distributed pay is taken into consideration and applied to every reach of the
farming process. The standards also call for restrictions on use of harmful
man-made chemicals in natural growing processes.
Squint Closely at the Label on the Banana; It'll Make You Smile Too http://brwacademy.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/fairtrade-show-off-your-label-106_595x335.jpg |
Like any movement driven by social patterns and
understandings, there is existing criticism. Farmers are spending more of their
income on their workers and working environment, and if sales of that
particular good are not good, the farmer really is forced into a tough position
and sometimes must completely lay-off workers, leaving them with no working
conditions at all.
Tea Leaf Worker for Fairtrade Farm http://www.fairtrade.ie/resources/tea_plucker.jpg |
With a greater awareness of the answer to “what exactly is
fair trade,” more products with the Fairtrade logo will [hopefully] be bought
and consumed, motivating other farming industries and communities to push
toward adhering to Fairtrade practices, expanding the number of farmers and
workers positively influenced by it. I definitely believe the practices make a
difference and it will continue to exponentially grow with greater
consideration and knowledge of the standards.