An introduction to Fair Trade An introduction to Fair Trade

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An introduction toFair Trade

An introduction toFair Trade

Before you finish eating breakfast in the morning, you’ve depended on more than half the world.

» Martin Luther King

1. Fair price for goods

2. Social premium

3. Better trading conditions

4. Environmental protection

Fairtradeor

Fair Trade?

Fair Tradecertification schemes

CommoditiesManufactured

products

Howard Msukwa

Karonga district in northern Malawi

Kilombero rice

Farming in Malawi

No machinery

No artificial irrigation

Hard to compete

How Fair Trade helps

NASFAM

Local farmers’ groups

Co-operatives

Built a new house

School fees

What this means for Howard

1827 – ‘Free Produce Society’ formed in the US, which boycotted products made by slaves.

Late 1940s – Overseas charities begin selling fairly traded handicrafts.

1965 – Oxfam launched the ‘Helping-by-Selling’ programme.

1988 - First Fairtrade label, Max Havelaar, launched in the Netherlands. The first product was coffee from Mexico.

1989 – Global coffee prices collapsed, with some farmers losing up to 70% of their income. Demand for Fair Trade goods increased.

2002 – Aberfeldy and Strathaven become the first Fairtrade towns in Scotland.

2013 – Scotland becomes a Fair Trade Nation.

Timeline

1994 - the first UK product receives Fairtrade certification – Green & Black’s ‘Maya Gold’ chocolate bar, using cocoa from Belize.

Clipper tea and Cafédirect coffee were the next two products to be certified Fairtrade shortly afterwards.

Fairtrade Towns

Community involvement:•Local authority areas•Fairtrade Town groups •Levels of awareness and buying of Fair Trade

Scottish Parliament:•Use and promote Fair Trade products

Scottish Government:•Public sector procurement•Curriculum

What is a Fair Trade Nation?

Why become a Fair Trade

Nation?

What can I do tosupport Fair Trade?

• Buy Fair Trade products• Encourage friends and family to buy Fair Trade products• Speak to local shops and businesses• Write to/email companies• Spread the word - join (or start) a Fair Trade group

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