The number of products sold with fair trade labels is growing
rapidly in Europe and the United States. Big chains like Wal-Mart,
Dunkin' Donuts, Starbucks and McDonald's have begun offering coffee and
other items. Fair trade brands hope to raise their profile by targeting
consumers who care about the environment, health and fair-labor
standards. Fair trade supporters say small farmers in the developing
world benefit by receiving a guaranteed fair price, while the
environment gets a break from intensive industrial farming. But critics
say consumers pay too much and that fair trade's guarantee of a good
return - no matter what the market price - sends the wrong economic
signal to farmers. When the price of a global commodity like coffee
tumbles in response to oversupply, overcompensated fair trade farmers
will remain in an uneconomic sector long after they should have switched
to some other crop or livelihood, free-market economists argue. CQ Researcher Fair Trade Labeling v.17-19 |
Latest Articles >