Trade, Development, and Immigration

Make your own mind up about Fairtrade


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It is a curious aspect of the Catholic Church in England and Wales that those who wish there to be the maximum room for personal judgement and discretion on matters of faith and morals are also the most keen to promote narrow prescriptive edicts to the faithful on other matters.

Whilst all must take the Church’s social teaching very seriously, by undertaking good works, making real sacrifices to meet charitable obligations and always treating people justly, the Church asks Catholics to make personal, prudential judgements about the detail of such matters. But, according to some, this opportunity for judgement does not stretch to the choice of whether or not to buy Fairtrade products. The purchase of Fairtrade products is often promoted as an obligation. The purchase of alternatives to Fairtrade products has been described by one priest as a sin worse than theft and by another as a deliberate choice to take from the poor.

Furthermore, this supposed obligation of Catholics to buy Fairtrade products is generally extended to a requirement to buy Fairtrade products with a capital F. In other words products that are certified by a body called the Fairtrade Labelling Organisation and approved by the Fairtrade Foundation – and often sold, at least in churches and schools, by a commercial, organisation called Traidcraft. As Arundel & Brighton’s Diocesan website puts it: “if it doesn’t say Fairtrade, it isn’t Fairtrade! Fairtrade status is only granted by the trade body, The Fairtrade Foundation.” The rigour of the checks that the Fairtrade Labelling Organisation makes on behalf of the Foundation has been questioned, but we will leave that aside for now.

However, the Fairtrade Labelling Organisation does not have a monopoly of virtue. In fact, there is a healthy market in products that have similar attributes to “officially labelled” products. Afghan Action, for example, is a model company in the ethical market, working in the most challenging conditions imaginable – perhaps too challenging for the Fairtrade Labelling Organisation. It provides extremely good conditions of work for its employees and overcomes numerous challenges to import its products through a suspicious customs service.

The experience of Union Coffee is equally telling. Union Coffee has impeccable ethical standards – often considerably better than those required by Fairtade labelled products. Though Union Coffee does sell some Fairtrade labelled coffee, much of its business simply does not fit into the Fairtrade business model which has a number of specific requirements and limitations.

These examples, and many others, should give Fairtrade proponents pause for thought, as should the requirements for Fairtrade status in schools. To obtain Fairtrade status, not only do Fairtrade products have to take pride of place in school, but Fairtrade “education” has to be rolled out in the curriculum too.

This is not education in the Newman sense of the word. One recent homework that I came across involved children cutting and pasting slogans from Traidcraft’s website onto an advertising poster for Fairtrade products. One of the propositions that students are supposed to assent to or dissent from to test whether they have learnt about Fairtrade is “I don’t think it’s fair that rich countries decide what farmers in poor countries get for their products.” This statement is simply false. Fairtrade proponents might not like certain aspects of the way markets for primary products work, but it is demonstrably and objectively false that rich countries set the prices that farmers in poor countries receive for their products. Coffee prices more than doubled between 2005 and 2008 and have since slipped back about 20%. Neither the rise nor the fall was “decided” by rich countries. To suggest that it was is the antithesis of education.

Those who promote Fairtrade tend to get trapped in the slipstream of particular organisations. But, what of the whole idea of fair trading (with a small f and small t)?

The most attractive argument for Christians in favour of buying fair trade products is that it ensures that a just price is paid. As the phrase goes, “it is justice, not charity”. This claim deserves serious thought. The just price in Christian tradition, certainly since Thomas Aquinas, has generally been regarded as the agreed market price – though there are important exceptions. Fair trade’s strongest card is that it goes into markets where there is little information, where primary producers can be, and often are, exploited and makes sure that they get a just, market price. It also provides sources of credit and forward pricing agreements that might not be available otherwise.

But, the reality is that there are many ways in which a just price, properly understood, can be paid to growers. In fact, multinationals generally offer better working conditions than indigenous employers in the under-developed world: Fairtrade makes much mileage by generalising from particular examples of abuse. Many producers make forms of coffee for which the Fairtrade model is wholly inappropriate. Many poor producers may not wish to pay the considerable Fairtrade registration fees – and there is no reason why they should feel obliged to do so to get the custom of Christian buyers in the West. Some will find the cooperative model of organisation, strongly encouraged in many Fairtrade product areas, inappropriate. Why should we exclude such people from our shopping basket? They may well be just as vulnerable and insecure as the Fairtrade producers. A senior person working in one primary product area remarked to me that Fairtade is more about making us feel good back in London, and that producers feel they have to join up for the PR effect on Western consumers.

A just price is not, as Fairtrade proponents suggest, whatever price is necessary to provide somebody with the means to continue in their current business. The so-called social premium is a form of charitable assistance to people who happen to produce particular goods that we choose to buy. It is not necessarily efficient or well targeted. And many of the other mark ups that we see on Fairtrade products simply never find their way back to the growers at all, something that has caused legitimate concern. Ultimately, poor producers of primary products need wider and better economic opportunities that can only come from development based on the rule of law, secure property rights and a free economy. To use an in vogue phrase, Fairtrade is not a sustainable model of development.

Some of the political campaigns of the Fairtrade Foundation – though certainly not its well judged campaign against cotton subsidies – might well, if they were successful, damage free trade and harm the world’s poorest people. But we should not pit “fair trade” against “free trade”. Fair trade arises from the free choices of individuals. There is no free market case against fair trade, as is sometimes suggested, but there are pragmatic reasons to think twice before being caught up in the slipstream of this movement.

The Fairtrade mark is, of course, a great marketing coup. Who wants to be seen as “unfair”? But to imply that free transactions are not fair unless they are stamped and certified by one particular organisation is wrong. Consumers should think carefully. The term “prudential personal judgement” could have been invented to describe the decision whether to buy fair Fairtrade products.

First published in the Catholic Herald

Academic and Research Director, IEA

Philip Booth is Senior Academic Fellow at the Institute of Economic Affairs. He is also Director of the Vinson Centre and Professor of Economics at the University of Buckingham and Professor of Finance, Public Policy and Ethics at St. Mary’s University, Twickenham. He also holds the position of (interim) Director of Catholic Mission at St. Mary’s having previously been Director of Research and Public Engagement and Dean of the Faculty of Education, Humanities and Social Sciences. From 2002-2016, Philip was Academic and Research Director (previously, Editorial and Programme Director) at the IEA. From 2002-2015 he was Professor of Insurance and Risk Management at Cass Business School. He is a Senior Research Fellow in the Centre for Federal Studies at the University of Kent and Adjunct Professor in the School of Law, University of Notre Dame, Australia. Previously, Philip Booth worked for the Bank of England as an adviser on financial stability issues and he was also Associate Dean of Cass Business School and held various other academic positions at City University. He has written widely, including a number of books, on investment, finance, social insurance and pensions as well as on the relationship between Catholic social teaching and economics. He is Deputy Editor of Economic Affairs. Philip is a Fellow of the Royal Statistical Society, a Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries and an honorary member of the Society of Actuaries of Poland. He has previously worked in the investment department of Axa Equity and Law and was been involved in a number of projects to help develop actuarial professions and actuarial, finance and investment professional teaching programmes in Central and Eastern Europe. Philip has a BA in Economics from the University of Durham and a PhD from City University.


6 thoughts on “Make your own mind up about Fairtrade”

  1. Posted 02/03/2009 at 11:47 | Permalink

    I have done. I have never bought that stuff and never will.

  2. Posted 02/03/2009 at 11:47 | Permalink

    I have done. I have never bought that stuff and never will.

  3. Posted 02/03/2009 at 12:19 | Permalink

    I must declare self interest having spent 18 years in Fair Trade Phillip, but i have seen some of the most fabulous transformations in environment and community and a rich diversity of emerging leaders in places off the radar and out of the minds of investors and consumers. Fair Trade can be exceptional in its ability to provide direct investment right to the place its needed most. I agree with you that Fairtrade has no moral authority but it is a widely respected mark of ‘change’ and ‘change’ that is long overdue. It is to the Fair Trade movement’s credit that you have written your article and opened up a discussion. From my of point view, the sustainable economy is emerging from Fair Trade

  4. Posted 02/03/2009 at 12:19 | Permalink

    I must declare self interest having spent 18 years in Fair Trade Phillip, but i have seen some of the most fabulous transformations in environment and community and a rich diversity of emerging leaders in places off the radar and out of the minds of investors and consumers. Fair Trade can be exceptional in its ability to provide direct investment right to the place its needed most. I agree with you that Fairtrade has no moral authority but it is a widely respected mark of ‘change’ and ‘change’ that is long overdue. It is to the Fair Trade movement’s credit that you have written your article and opened up a discussion. From my of point view, the sustainable economy is emerging from Fair Trade

  5. Posted 02/03/2009 at 14:37 | Permalink

    Thanks, Robin. It is sustainable if Fairtrade seeks to provide services to the market (forward markets, price transparency etc) that do not exist for various reasons. I agree with you there. If, through the social premium, they seek to keep people producing things for which there is not a long-term market, I worry though. Somewhere, some other producer is probably losing. Of course the key problem (on which we both probably agree) is that institutional weaknesses in the countries concerned reduce economic opportunities. I do think that the Fairtrade slogans are designed to be attractive to a certain type of consumer and naturally repel market economists! What is the change that is overdue?

  6. Posted 02/03/2009 at 14:37 | Permalink

    Thanks, Robin. It is sustainable if Fairtrade seeks to provide services to the market (forward markets, price transparency etc) that do not exist for various reasons. I agree with you there. If, through the social premium, they seek to keep people producing things for which there is not a long-term market, I worry though. Somewhere, some other producer is probably losing. Of course the key problem (on which we both probably agree) is that institutional weaknesses in the countries concerned reduce economic opportunities. I do think that the Fairtrade slogans are designed to be attractive to a certain type of consumer and naturally repel market economists! What is the change that is overdue?

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