Fair trade lets workers have a fair amount of money so they can survive. Some things that have the Fair Trade mark are Cadbury chocolate, coffee, stationery, craft, toys and rice.
Fair Trade is supposed to pay fairer prices to individual growers, improving the economy in the (usually impoverished) regions where coffee is grown, passing that extra cost off to consumers. Tim Harford, an economist and a coffee lover, writes in his lovely book "The Undercover Economist", that fair trade coffee is often used as a means to allow coffee vendors to get customers to pay a higher price for their coffee. Branding coffee as "fair trade" allows them, while indeed paying a little more to the growers, to get a much higher price for a similar cup of coffee. Please see the related links for details.
You should use fair-trade so poor hard working farmers get the money they they need and with fair trade farmers who collect coco beans and make tea and coffee and other fair trade foods should get most of the profit when an item of fair trade is purchased
Tea, coffee and chocolate
Fair trade bananas are from places like Africa made by poor people so they make it more expensive to pay extra to the people in Africa that help make it.
From India
COLUMBIA
South Africa
all over africa!
Fair trade coffee comes from Uganda, Indonesia, Ethiopia and Columbia. Coffee is one of the ten types of fair-trade products and in 2003; £34m worth of coffee was sold. The first Fairtrade coffee in the United Kingdom was called Campaign Coffee and the second one Encafe.
Fair trade is popular in the United Kingdom. It is also used in Latin America and United States. Coffee is a large fair trade commodity.
it comes from ghana or africa
most of the coffee's are but some times there not.
No
Very few. Starbucks sells fair trade coffee beans for you to take home and use.
Fair trade coffee is obviously Fair trade, but not all coffee is fairtrade. Look for the fairtrade mark on products, to help you find things that are fairtrade. hope this helped
That is a highly debatable question in the book "how fair trade is fair trade coffee" it explains that although certifyed fair trade promots its self to offer a fair value, it is still extreamly low compared to the selling price in the United States (this concerns coffee)