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By
Saumya Roy, Shloka Nath
FORBES
INDIA
Jul
21, 2010
Indian farmers have been selling their fair trade produce to
developed markets for years by getting certified by the Fairtrade
Labelling Organizations International (FLO). Now the FLO wants
to invert that model. It will introduce a fair trade label for
the Indian market next year. The Spice Board of India is looking
to follow suit with a fair trade label for the domestic spice
market.
First, lets understand what fair trade is. Fair trade is
an organised movement that helps producers in developing countries
get a premium for their products if they follow better social,
labour and environmental standards.
More than $4 billion worth of fair trade products were sold internationally
in 2008, up 22 percent since the previous year. While sales of
products like fair trade tea, coffee, flowers, wine and beer have
grown in double digits for the last several years, cultivation
has outpaced demand, according to reports.
If the fair trade movement is implemented in India, it could
open up a huge new market for fair trade farmers, giving them
stability against foreign exchange fluctuation.
For the movement to be successful, however, it requires the customers
to be sensitive about this. The size of the market is very
small because Indians are not really concerned about this,
says Arvind Singhal, chief executive of retail consulting company
KSA Technopak. Companies are trying to create fair trade
brands for their own reasons but if the customer is not sensitive
then this will have only a limited impact.
The Indian market and other domestic markets in producing countries
are increasingly important for the fair trade movement because
they could each be larger than the European market, which is the
largest market for fair trade products. For instance, take Chetna
Organic Farmers Association, which works with 9,000 cotton farmers
in the Vidarbha region of Maharashtra, Telangana in Andhra Pradesh,
and Koraput, Bolangir and Kalahandi region of Orissa. It sells
most of its cotton in Europe at a premium of Rs. 320 a quintal.
But even now it is able to sell only half the produce; the rest
gets sold in India without any premium.
It is no wonder then that Seth Petchers, chief executive of Shop
for Change, a marketing and labelling organisation for domestic
fair trade products, is trying to launch this movement in India.
Shop for Change launched a range of fair trade clothes along with
designer Anita Dongres prêt label AND. The collection
featured an ad campaign that starred fair trade cotton farmers
along with former Miss India, Gul Panag.
This collection was made with fair trade cotton from Chetnas
farmers in Orissa, who were paid Rs. 35 per kilo of cotton rather
than the market price of Rs. 30 per kilo. The FLO also fixes a
fair trade price, which includes a minimum price for the product
and a fair trade premium. Says Reykia Fick, external relations
co-ordinator, FLO, On top of stable prices (usually the
fair trade minimum price), producer organisations are paid a fair
trade premium additional funds to invest in social or economic
development projects.
Farmer members of Chetna, in Andhra Pradeshs Karimnagar
district, have used this premium along with an international grant
to build a storage warehouse for their cotton. During the off-season,
they rent out the warehouse as a marriage hall and distribute
earnings for the co-operative. Another farmer group in Maharashtras
Akola district has used the premium to build a school. In Keralas
Kannur district, the premium is used to create a fund for distressed
farmers. It has also allowed the community to set up solar sensing
technology as a benign blockade warding wild elephants off the
cashew nut trees. Their cashew produce is labelled Jumbo Cashews
in the European market.
All of this may or may not result in a price premium for a consumer
depending on whether a retailer chooses to crunch its margins.
Increasingly, retailers have started selling fair trade products
without a price premium for consumers. Dongres fair trade
collection sold at the same price as her other clothes. Cadburys
launched a fair trade version of its Dairy Milk chocolate internationally
at the same price as the rest of its Dairy Milk chocolates.
In case of fair trade products it is the imagery which
is different rather than a product differentiation, says
Shital Mehta, COO of premium menswear brand, Van Heusen. Right
now fair trade numbers are small. Companies want to portray themselves
as fair employers but are just experimenting with a small percentage
of their products. Will they ever get all their products under
the fair trade umbrella?
That change will come when it becomes a civil society movement
as it has in the West, says Tomy Mathews, founder of Fair Trade
Alliance of Kerala. Mathews alliance has been supplying
through the FLO for years and he says, Attempts to create
independent labels diverting from the uniform global message on
global trade justice is doing disservice to the philosophy of
fair trade. I dont look fairly on [the] Spice Board initiative
or the Shop for Change initiative. The moment you confuse market
with different logos youre already losing the game before
it begins.
Retailers that have included more equitable conditions for artisans
and weavers, such as Fabindia and Anokhi, have done well here
already and this movement can get extended to farmers as well,
says Roopa Mehta, president of the Fair Trade Forum of India.
But there may still be some distance between promise and scale
in the market. Devangshu Dutta, CEO of retail consulting company,
Third Eyesight, says he sees a market developing for fair trade
products, albeit slowly. Things will change. But that change
will have to come from the customer side. Currently, it is a very
limited market but it could be a business proposition for a few
companies.
Find this article in Forbes
India Magazine of 30 July, 2010
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