Blogging Fair Trade

Fair trade, ethical business and other musings

Category : Ethical business

Wetherby to get the Fair Trade treatment this Christmas

Wetherby Fair Trade Christmas Market

A small number of local, independent, fair trade organisations are holding an exclusive Christmas Market in Wetherby Town Hall on Tuesday 6th December. There will be mince pies and a festive cafe serving fair trade tea, coffee and cake, and a number of stalls selling fantastic fair trade gifts. It’s a great opportunity for the people of Wetherby to get in some Christmas shopping, and to buy some truly unique gifts that will not only bring joy to their loved ones, but will also have a real effect on the producers thousands of miles away.

At a time when money is tight and people are reining in their spending, fair trade needs more support than ever. Shareholders of multinational corporations can generally cope a lot better with a decrease in profits than third-world producers can cope with their products no longer being bought in the UK. If people stop buying fair trade, the producers lose their source of income. So, at a time when we all have a good reason to spend money, lets spend it on products that make a real difference.

On Tuesday 6th December, the people of Wetherby have a great chance to discover some of the beautiful fair trade gifts available, and to stock up on Christmas presents in the process! We look forward to seeing you there!

Fair Trade Gifts in York this weekend

It is that time of year again: York Big Green Market is back! This week, from Thursday 3rd to Sunday 6th November, York’s Parliament Street will be the home of one of the largest ethical markets in the north of England. The Big Green Market takes over the centre of York this time each year, to offer the people of York a great range of unique fair trade and ethical products from local, independent businesses.

Notable fair trade organisations that will be there this year include:
* The By Hand Fair Trade Shop, which will be selling fair trade sterling silver jewellery, as well as some great fair trade Christmas decorations, eco-friendly bags and other ethical gifts
* Fairly Scrumptious, offering a delicious range of fair trade cupcakes, chocolate brownies and other delights for the sweet-toothed amongst us
* Kigali Crafts, a fabulous company trading fairly with Rwandan genocide survivors and selling a great range of jewellery and other items
* Shea Alchemy, selling luxurious beauty products made from fair trade shea butter

There are also a whole host of companies selling environmentally friendly, recycled and handcrafted products, making the Big Green Market THE place to start your Christmas shopping this year.

The Big Green Market is open from 9 to 6 Thursday to Saturday and from 10 to 5 on Sunday. For more information about the markets and the companies involved, click here to visit The Big Green Market Facebook Page.

First post of 2011: Fair trade fashion – the future

Cheap, throw-away clothing should be a thing of the past. Fair trade is revolutionising the clothing industry and providing a real alternative to sweat shops and child labour.

In this video Emma Watson, of Harry Potter fame, talks about her experiences in Bangladesh and the massive difference that fair trade fashion can make and is making to producers in the developing world:

Let’s make this an ethical Christmas

The run-up to Christmas is now in full swing and there is no better time to pledge to make your Christmas an ethical one.

And with the high street’s number one ethical shop [according to the Ethical Consumer magazine], Monsoon, today being exposed as having child labour and underpaid workers in its supply chain in the Observer newspaper; the best way to ensure that the products you buy are truly ethical, is to go fair trade.

Monsoon was nominated as the most ethical business on the UK high street because it has a strict ethical policy, and indeed it has reacted to the revelations about the unethical goings-on in its supply chain (which, incidentally, were discovered in the company’s own internal audits) by firing the sub-contractor responsible for employing children believed to be have been trafficked, and working together with an NGO to put the children in care homes until they can be reunited with their family.

This is all well and good, and Monsoon should be commended for dealing with the issues head on and doing all it can to prevent child labour and exploitation being part of its supply chain. But the problem is, the supply chains of the large high street shops are so long and convoluted that these practices will continue to be carried out by sub-contracters and, most of the time, the high street businesses won’t even know it is happening.

This is just one of the many reasons as to why fair trade is so fantastic. One of the basic principles of fair trade is transparency: keeping the supply chain short and making sure that there are no sub-contracters helping themselves to a great big chunk of the money designated for the work force.

The producers lie at the heart of fair trade. Often they work together in cooperatives, which then export their goods to the retailers in the West. The money paid by the retailers goes directly back to the cooperatives, where it is generally used to make the business more sustainable, to improve production methods and to provide education and training.

So, when you buy fairly traded products, you can rest safe in the knowledge that the goods weren’t made by children, stolen from their families to produce clothes and other products for western consumers. You know that the adults who have produced the goods will have been paid fairly and will be directly benefiting from your purchase.

With fair trade, your money goes where it belongs: to the people at the bottom of the supply chain; the people who have a lot less than we do; the people whose lives fair trade is transforming.

So let’s make this an ethical Christmas, and buy fair trade.