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| Bean Blues | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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About Coffee > Bean BluesThe Plight of Small Coffee Farmers and Farm LaborersCoffee is produced in tropical climates. Its large-scale commercial cultivation was started in the 17th Century in the colonies of the Dutch, Portuguese, Spanish, French and English. From the beginning the farm labor was exploited. All the colonial powers used slave labor or forced labor. Brazil was the most notorious in exploiting slave labor in the Latin American Countries. Slavery and colonial empires are things of the past but the situation for small farmers and farm labor has not improved significantly.
Coffee is a commodity item, and its price fluctuates depending on many international factors over which small farmers have no control or knowledge. They do not have the experience or resources of large estates to hedge against price fluctuation by contracting futures. For example, the price of green coffee (New York C-market, coffee, cocoa & sugar, is the recognized base price) has recently been fluctuating around 50¢/pound or less. The average cost of production is about 80 ¢ /pound. Sometimes farmers have given up picking the crop because they cannot afford to process it. This means they cannot take care of their farms and either lose their land or change to an alternate crop. Unfortunately, some turn to producing drugs.
In the 1950's the US government and the international banking community created a big push for technification to increase coffee production. Technification required farmers to plant high yielding varieties and cut down trees to increase production and ripen cherries faster. These sungrown coffee trees required the use of chemical pesticides, as the birds that ate pests had no habitat left. It also required herbicides to control weeds and fertilizers to input the energy needed for intense production. Technification changed the farmers' generations-old methods of farming, but they had little choice if they wanted US aid money. These farmers have very little knowledge of how to use the chemicals safely. They continue to use deadly chemicals like DDT that is prohibited in most industrialized nations. Because of this unsafe use of chemicals, lack of education and no health care, these people suffer. Fortunately, more and more consumers are becoming aware of the unfair treatment of coffee farmers and are pressing, with their dollars, for fairer treatment. Some assistance is coming to these small farmers from their governments and international communities that help them organize into cooperatives. Often these cooperatives have their own beneficios and exporting abilities. Many individual farmers and cooperatives are trying to get out of the commodity market by improving the quality of their product and selling to private importers at higher prices. This is a step in the right direction, but it is only a very small percentage of the industry.
There are also many non-profit organizations such as Coffee-Kids that help the communities of coffee farmers through humanitarian projects. They are often funded directly by concerned citizens and conscious corporations. There are many roasters that are also actively working to improve the life on coffee farms. |
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