Copan kids heading into the coffee fields at harvest time |
When I stand in my Canadian shoes, I am an ardent supporter of fair trade – comercio justo as it’s known here in Honduras. Count me in for any practices that try to help small producers in under-developed countries make a decent living from their coffee crops and such.
But when I look at fair trade from the perspective of Hondurans, things get a little muddy.
That’s especially true around the question of prohibiting child labour.
Taking steps to
stop children from being forced to work to produce goods for the developed
world is, understandably, one of the most fundamental principles of fair trade.
Back home in Canada, I took pride in paying more for fair-trade coffee,
believing that the extra cost was worth it if it ensured that some struggling
family somewhere in the world earned a bit more for their coffee crop and
didn't have to send their children into the field like tiny slaves.
But like I say,
it all just gets a little less clear once you look at it from the Honduran
perspective.
Beans, corn and
coffee are easily the three most important crops for poor rural families in
this part of Honduras, the west. The first two keep a family fed. The third –
coffee – generates pretty much the only cash many of the families will see over
the course of a year. Rural Hondurans are quite good at living a very nearly
cash-free existence, but coffee is a treasured “money crop” because it pays for
all the things that even resourceful Hondurans couldn't otherwise access - like schooling, health care, shoes, laundry
soap, electricity, purified water, transportation, household emergencies, vet
care and animal feed, to name but a few.
In other words,
coffee really matters. And fair trade really matters, too, because as always
the producers are the ones who make the least money by the time coffee beans go
from their fields to your cup at a high-end specialty café. I once crunched the
numbers to get a sense of the difference, and it turns out that a nice cup of
coffee at your favourite café sells for roughly 100 times the price that the
producer got for the beans that went into that cup.
So yes, an
organization that certifies producers to ensure they make more money in
exchange for adhering to better agricultural and hiring practices – what’s not
to like? But there’s the theory of fair trade, and then there’s the reality.
For instance,
child labour. Given that more than 80 per cent of coffee producers in Honduras
are small one-family operations, everybody in the family has to work when the
harvest is on. And for the really poor families who don’t even own land, it’s
even more important to hire the kids out to producers looking for extra hands during
the harvest from October to February.
The public
primary schools shut down for a two-month vacation in December-January specifically
so children can work in the fields. When the coffee season is on, giant truckloads
of children being driven off into the hills around Copan Ruinas or even to
nearby Guatemala is a routine daily sight.
It’s child
labour, there’s no doubt about that. In an ideal world, these kids would be in
school rather than working. But it’s also the only way that a lot of Honduran
families can make it through the year. For mothers with small children, taking
their kids along for a day of picking coffee is often the only option if they
don’t have anyone to look after the child while they work.
For these
families, the well-intentioned fair trade prohibition against child labour
looks very much like a threat, a risk to their livelihoods. If all the growers
in Honduras actually stopped using child labour, the result would be disastrous
for so many people. From a Honduran perspective, prohibiting child labour
actually increases the risks for children.
Nor is the
certification process easy, or cheap. Some of the small co-operatives have
figured things out, but it would be difficult if not impossible for a small
independent producer to get certified.
And yes,
fair-trade beans fetch a higher price on the market for producers. But meeting
the requirements for fair-trade or organic designation also means higher costs.
Last year, a local fair-trade-certified coffee co-operative here in Copan also
learned the hard way that buyers sometimes just declare they've got enough
fair-trade product for now, leaving producers to sell on the regular market
regardless of the extra time, work and money they've put in as certified
growers.
What’s an
ethically aware coffee drinker to do? I’d suggest buying from a local coffee-roasting
company that purchases directly from growers in under-developed countries. I
went along on a coffee tour earlier this year with an Australian couple who own
Jasper Coffee in Melbourne, and I was really impressed at how much support they
give the Copan producers who they've been buying from, and how much interest
they take in their lives. That’s the kind of coffee company I’d like to
support. (In Victoria, Level Ground looks like it might have those kinds of relationships.)
And please,
continue appreciating the principles of fair trade, and the good work that the
movement has done in under-developed countries. It’s just that like everything else
in this world, doing the right thing is more complicated than just buying into
a brand.