Fair Trade means essentially one thing - Fair prices for
the products produced by the small farmers and cooperatives. Just prices
can only be had when the producers have direct access to the buyers of their
products. On the road to the market there are many middlemen who are like
roadblocks barring the away of the farmers from making direct contact with
the buying public thus preventing them from getting higher prices. This
is an unfair system that FAIR TRADE can change. FAIR TRADE is a form of
direct action that has AN IMMEDIATE IMPACT and changes unjust structures
that maintain poverty and economic serfdom.
The unjust socioeconomic system set-up and dominated by
a oligarchy of ruling elite is one of the main causes of hunger and widespread
poverty in the Philippines as it is elsewhere in the Developing World. Small
producers in the Philippines are at the mercy of a powerful clique that
control production and the marketing of food.
Because of this system food producers are prevented from
reaching the market but they cannot even fully own the fruit of their labor.
Most work as tenant farmers on land owned by absentee landlords and they
have to give as much as 40% of their produce to the land owner. In mango
production they give 60% or 70% of the crop to the wealthy contract sprayer
or the land owner. Since Spanish colonial times the land in the Philippines
has been in the hands of a few very wealthy families and during the American
colonial area and ever since little has change. The comprehensive land Reform
although enacted into law has been ineffective.
This is because many of the law-makers, Congressional Representatives,
and Senators are landlords themselves and from their position of power they
pass amendments to the land reform act that make it powerless. They also
use their influence to prevent the implementation of the law in their lands
and others bribe government officials to find exemptions for them.
70% of the population are rural based and have remained
in poverty because of the unjust economic and social situation. The population
of the Philippines today is 65 million. If we can review this and represent
the ownership of land and property in the Philippines in a Pyramid we can
see that:
- Only 2% of the population own about 70% of the means
of production, land, infrastructure, factories and real estate.
- A small middle class, about 20% of the population, have
about 10% ownership.
- Whereas the vast majority of the population are rural
folk and make up 75% of the population but only own 2O% of the property
among them all. Whatever food items they produce and can keep for themselves
is usually only sufficient to feed their family but if they have a surplus
they can never rise out of poverty because the prices of their products
are controlled.
The Example Of Mangos
Mangos are a very delicious and desirable tropical fruit.
The mango tree grows to a large size and can be very productive when fifty
or sixty years old. The PREDA FAIR TRADE PRODUCT project is helping small
farmers and farmer cooperatives to produce organic mangos in the traditional
way both for the fresh fruit market and for making dried mangos with no
chemical additives and preservative (SO2) free. Preda buys the fresh fruit
directly from the farmers paying them a fair price by the kilo. In other
provinces where there is a drying factory PREDA arranges for the farmers
to sell their mangos directly to the dried mango processing factory and
they bypass all the middlemen. Preda can do this because The Fair Trade
marketing organizations in Europe pay a just and fair price.
PREDA Is a Philippine Non-Government Organization that
helps farmers and other craft people to overcome the exploitation that causes
poverty. It is a Fair trade organization that believes social change for
the poor and the oppressed can come about through the practice of Fair Trade.
Preda exports dried mangos sourced from poor farmers at Fair Trade prices
and provides other development projects to the producers.
Higher Prices For Traditionally Grown Mangos
Many poor farmers have a few mango trees. Preda is encouraging
them to plant more mango trees on eroding land. The mango trees have a network
of roots that hold the soil and the water and improves their irrigation
and earnings. The farmers are encouraged to continue to fertilize the trees
for a good crop by keeping their chickens and water Buffalo under the tree
to fertilizer it. They are encouraged to burn grass and leaves under the
trees to help induce the trees to flower in a natural way. More and more
farmers are putting small paper bags over the fruit when the fruit is a
week old so they are protected and there is no need for pesticides. Others
are encouraged to plant Neem trees near their mangos to ward off insects.
When they do blossom the flowers are frequently attacked by insects who
lay eggs that destroy the flower and so there is no harvest.
Contract Spraying
In recent years spraying Potassium Nitrate has been used
to induce the tree to flower and then pesticides are used to control the
insects that attack the blossoms. This can produce a very rich crop of fruit
and does not harm the tree if it is done once only every two years. But
poor farmers cannot afford this procedure but the rich middlemen or the
land owner can and they frequently get the farmer to sign a contract to
allow them to spray the trees and control the insects. For this contract
service the middlemen claim 60 % of the harvest and give only 40% to the
farmer. Sometimes the division is 30% for the farmer and 70% for the capitalist.
So the farmer earns very little from his trees and his work of harvesting.
A Buyers Market
Some small farmers harvest what the tree produces naturally
others borrow money at high interest rates to spray their trees themselves.
But they don't have access to a fair market. Most towns in a mango growing
areas have a mango buying station usually owned by a wealthy family or by
a export company. They set the buying price by size and weight and poor
farmers do not have the contacts or transportation to sell their fruit in
the urban wholesale market or to exporters.
Unless they are members of a well managed cooperative they
do not have the large quantity that would make individual marketing profitable
so they sell at the local buyers price. In some areas the local buyer is
also the capitalist for the spraying and thus has a monopoly of the harvest.
Also the same capitalist controls the supply of the flower inducer and the
pesticides. So individual farmers have to pay a higher price if they want
to spray themselves. Cooperatives can help farmers in the production stage
if they have the capital but the cooperatives cannot get control of the
market.
Spraying of potassium nitrate and moderate use of pesticides
on the mango flower or blossom does not effect the fruit. PREDA encourages
farmers to attach bags to each fruit to eliminate the need for pesticides
on the fruit.
The PREDA Organization is linked with FAIR TRADE ORGANIZATIONS
such as GEPA (Schwelm) and members of the European Fair trade Association
(EFTA) and Third World Partners (Ravensburg). These groups have a market
and they pay a fair price for dried mangos. This enables PREDA to challenge
the monopoly or the cartel in a given area and bring the farmers in more
direct contact with the market and get just prices.
PREDA gets a just price for SO2 free dried mangos from
the Fair Trade Organizations and can offer high farm gate prices to the
farmers for organically and traditionally grown mangos and encourage them
to grow traditionally. To increase production without using chemical inducer
the Project offers the farmers organic fertilizer made from compost or more
refined fertilizer made from worming castings. It trains and financially
assists the farmers to produce this fertilizer themselves by setting up
vermi-culture production units on their farms. This is a slow process and
we are only beginning to have an impact.
PREDA PRODUCTION LOANS
For those farmers who are exploited by both the contract
sprayer and the monopoly and who insist on spraying their trees to induce
blossoms also want help from Preda. Preda while encouraging them to grow
in a traditional way with natural fertilizer still helps them by giving
them low interest production loans and training in how to bag the fruit
so they have no need for pesticides. Preda also buys their fruit, not by
contract pricing, but by the kilo. If the farmer cannot reach the Processing
factory to sell directly the farmer still gets the same high price from
Preda. PREDA CAN ONLY DO THIS BECAUSE IT HAS JUST PRICES FROM THE FAIR TRADE
ORGANIZATIONS.
This is one example of how FAIR TRADE directly benefits
small producers who are victims of cartels and monopolies in The South and
helps break the cycle of exploitation and poverty. |