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As a brief follow-on from my previous post, here’s a campaign Tearfund are conducting. This was flagged up in God 360, and makes a strong call to act collectively to support the Ethical Trade Initiative.
Follow the “take action now” link on the Tearfund website and make a difference.
(it’s in the youth section, so I’m feeling a bit ‘down with the kids’ by bigging this up, but make no apologies for doing so – it’s worth it. Wonder why it’s in the youth section though? Maybe once we get past our teens we don’t buy new clothes?….)
It’s Fairtrade Fortnight now – from 23rd February to 8th March.

Fair trade products and practices have been an area of interest – passion? – for me for a good while now. We buy fairly traded produce at home where we can, and the origins of what we buy has become more important for us as the years have gone by. I was given pause for thought by Fourth Space the other day when he hinted that (and I might be extrapolating here so forgive me if this is a bit of a misinterpretation) the origins of our food is a middle class concern – and perhaps even a middle class luxury. He’s got a point in terms of the accessibility and affordability of food which is local, organic, and yes even fair trade – all of these factors can make an item more expensive. In the case of fair trade it almost inevitably will, surely? Because low prices for the consumer will mean less than a living wage for the original grower or maker.
So why do I think fair trade is important? I read God 360 last night and it reflected on Proverbs 31: 8 & 9
Speak up for the people who have no voice,
for the rights of all the down-and-outers.
Speak out for justice!
Stand up for the poor and destitute”
(from “The Message” paraphrase by Eugene Paterson)
God 360 went on to reflect on the voiceless nature of the world’s working poor, and connected them with the fairtrade movement and how this enables them to form trade unions to barter for better working conditions and to get a fair price for their work. So for me, and for so many other, fair trade is not just an ethical concern, it’s a spiritual one. As Rob Bell says, everything is spiritual.
Over on my husband’s blog he put up a post the other day which summarises the sort of knots we as a couple tie ourselves into when we are trying to be ethical consumers. I know loads of people who love Starbucks and have no qualms about going there (and the global success of their brand does kind of hint that it’s not just my friends and acquaintances who are giving them trade…). But Naomi Klein’s “No Logo” has left a long-lingering cloud over Starbucks for us. Why do we have an issue with it? Well in “No Logo” Klein outlines their business model, describing a ‘cluster strategy’:
Starbucks’ policy is to drop “clusters” of outlets in areas already dotted with cafes and espresso bars. This strategy relies just as heavily on economy of scale as Wal-Mart’s does and the effect on competitors is much the same….instead of opening a new store in every city in the world, or even in North America, Starbucks waits until it can blitz an entire area and spread…”like headlice through a kindergarten”. It’s a highly aggressive strategy, and it involves something the company calls “cannibalization”.
The idea is to saturate an area with stores until the coffee competition is so fierce that sales drop even in individual Starbucks outlets…Understandably the closer the the outlets get to each other, the more they begin to poach or “cannibalize” each others clientele…What this means is that while sales were slowing at individual stores, the total sales of all the chain’s stores [were] doubling, in fact between 1995 and 1997.
It also helped Starbucks, no doubt, that its cannibalization strategy preys not only on other Starbucks outlets but equally on its real competitors, independently run coffee shops and restaurants. And, unlike Starbucks, these lone businesses can only profit from one store at a time. The bottom line is that clustering…is a competitive retail strategy that is only an option for a large chain.
Now, the list of accusations (well- evidenced in the book, if you’re interested) goes on, and of course Starbucks is far from being a lone offender. But this particular description of how Starbucks operated hit home to us at the time we read it because we actually saw it happening in Edinburgh’s relatively small city centre, and we also saw or heard of a number of city-centre independent coffee shops and local chains fold as a result of this Starbucks-rule-the-world approach.
It has also bothered me for a long time that Starbucks have bigged-up their fair trade credentials when for ages the only fairtrade product you could get was a filter coffee (I went in and checked and got really wishy-washy answers from the staff. Other friends did the same and we all got the same feeble responses. There was a campaign for a while to try and pressure them into getting into fair trade through consumer demand, which basically just meant going in and asking for a fair trade cappucino or whatever). And now Starbucks are the world’s biggest buyer of Fairtrade coffee in the world. It just doesn’t sound right somehow…But then they are, like Hoover, becoming the default brand name used to describe getting a coffee: “Just going out for a Starbucks”. If you’re that big then sheer scale will dictate you’ll be the biggest buyer, or seller, or something or other. Maybe I should be a bit more gracious and concede that it’s great that Starbucks are buying and therefore leading the march for so much fair trade coffee. Surely that can only be a good thing for growers? (answers on a postcard – or via the comments section of this post – please!)
But it still bothers me that they are becoming more and more ‘present’ (although they shut down loads of outlets in the UK last year apparently, not that I noticed around here). In Sainsburys at the weekend we were buying some of the groceries we needed for my parents coming to stay, and ended up in the tea and coffee aisle. So many products are fair trade now, it’s really good. But there they were, two boxes of Starbucks fair trade coffee on the shelf. We just couldn’t resist doing a bit of reorganisation as we walked by…surely they don’t need us to take their coffee home too?
Now you see it...
...Now you don't
I read this at lunch time and found myself inspired. Some great tips for looking after yourself when life gets on top of you…and good advice to stop life getting on top of you in the first place.
Take care. I’m going to make myself a nice big mug of coffee (fair trade & decaf, so all good!).





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