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& Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

&Coffee

FairtradeRwanda

Page 2: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced the coffee beans?

We all enjoy a coffee when we’re out shopping.

Page 3: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

0.05%The actual figure is…

This is the percentage that a Rwandan coffee producer gets from the average price charged for a cup of coffee in a Western country.

Page 4: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

• why is this figure so low?

Surprised?

Do you think it’s fair?

This presentation looks at:

• what effect does it have on the producers?

• what can we do about it? and

• where does coffee come from?

Page 5: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Rwanda

Rwanda is a small country in Africa, about the size of Wales.

Page 6: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

It has active volcanoes along its borders with Uganda and Congo.

This volcano is Nyiragongo, by Lake Kibuye in the west of Rwanda.

Because of Rwanda’s good rainfall, there are many lakes.

Page 7: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Rwanda’s famous mountain gorillas live on the lush slopes of the volcanoes.

Page 8: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The fertile volcanic soil and plentiful rainfall mean that crops grow well.

The crop growing around this typical Rwandan village is sorghum, one of the staple foods of Rwanda.

It can be made into porridge and beer.

Page 9: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

With such good conditions for growing food, 90% of Rwandans are subsistence farmers.

Page 10: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

But look at this photo. What is happening?

People are being forced to cultivate land which is too steep. This causes the erosion in the photo.

This shows that the farmland no longer produces enough to feed people, so they have to farm less suitable land.

Page 11: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

• Global warming means rain in Rwanda is less reliable.

Why is this?

This means: In January 1994, the World Food Programme warned that 800,000 people were at risk of starvation in Rwanda.

Remember that date and the number of people.

• Global dimming means less rain.

Page 12: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Make the land profitable – grow cash crops like coffee and use the money to buy food.

So if your land does not provide enough food, what can you do?

Look at this photo of a Rwandan coffee packet. See how important coffee is to Rwanda. Look at the man’s shoes. Not many people in Rwanda own shoes.

Page 13: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Up to 75% of Rwanda's foreign exchange earnings come from coffee.

Rich countries and poor countries made an agreement in the 1950s through the United Nations, called the International Coffee Agreement.

This gave producer countries quotas of coffee they were allowedto sell.

Because the amount of coffee on the market was controlled, the price was stable.

Coffee used to give Rwanda a good income.

Page 14: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

But look at this graph:

It shows the price of 100kg of coffee between 1997 and 2003.

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

1997 2003

US$

Page 15: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

In 1989, the United States government, under pressure from multinational companies, refused to re-sign the International Coffee Agreement.

What happened?

Without US support,the Agreement ended.

The Rwandan economy collapsed within months.

More coffee came on to the market, and the price dropped.

Page 16: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

• Nestlé• Phillip Morris• Procter and Gamble• Sara Lee

4 companies dominate the world coffee market:

Coffee is the second-biggest commodity by value in the world.

How can companies influence the US government?

Page 17: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Nestlé and Procter and Gamble alone control more than 50% of world coffee trade. That gives them enormous power.

So if you are a poor coffee farmer, you have to accept the price offered to you by the major companies. If you don’t, who else are you going to sell your coffee to?

Page 18: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The average wage in Rwanda is £122 a year

Nestlé’s net profits are £112a second

Page 19: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

that’s £3,534,579,439 a year

or quadruple the entire national wealth of Rwanda

Rwanda has debts of over £717,750,000

21% of its income is spent servicing its debt

quadruple what it is able to spend on health

Page 20: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Has the price of coffee in the shops dropped?

Us!• Returns on our investments and shares• Interest on our bank and building society

accounts• Into our pension schemes• Lower taxes – if companies make greater profits,

which are taxed, we have to pay less personal tax.

No! So where do the profits go?

Page 21: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

What happens when you can’t grow enough food and you don’t have money to buy food?

When there is not enough food in the country to feed everyone?

Page 22: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Between April and June, 1994, 800,000 people were killed in the

genocide in Rwanda.

The photograph was taken at a school in the south of Rwanda where about 20,000 people were killed. The site is now a memorial to the genocide. Some of the clothes of those killed have been hung up here in the school’s assembly hall, so that no-one can deny what happened and so people will remember.

Page 23: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The reasons for the genocide are numerous and highly complex – perhaps they will never be fully understood.

But it is generally agreed that the perceived pressure on the land and the economic collapse were two of the factors that contributed to it and that perhaps the genocide might not have happened without these factors.

One of the things that the people who killed were told was that the people they killed would take their land.

Page 24: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

But Rwanda today is about a lot more than the genocide.

Page 25: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The schools are once again full of students.

The churches are again full of people singing. The country is

being re-built.

2003 2004

The capital, Kigali

The children of Rwanda are smiling once more.

Page 26: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

What do Rwandan coffee producers do for their 0.05%?

Now let’s look at this question:

Page 27: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

These are members of a coffee-producing co-operative in Kibuye Province.

A coffee tree takes four years to come to fruition; during that time, it must be weeded and mulched – it’s very labour intensive.

Page 28: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The coffee cherries which contain the beans don’t all ripen at the same time, so every day people must return to the trees to pick the ripe cherries – again, very time-consuming.

Page 29: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Once picked, the skins of the cherries are removed by hand, and the beans are washed.

Page 30: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Most Rwandans get their water from the lake or river, so the water to wash the beans must be brought up in these 20 litre jerry cans.

Page 31: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

After the cherries are washed, they are dried. It takes about two days to remove the skins from enough cherries to fill the basket. The basket will then be carried by hand to the nearest coffee buying post, about 4 km away. It weighs about 30kg, and will bring about 20p.

Page 32: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Being so labour-intensive, everyone must get involved, even the youngest children, so they can’t go to school.

Page 33: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Why do you need money if you grow your own food?

Page 34: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Most children in the UK get diarrhoea in their lives.

Imagine what it is like in Rwanda, where the water comes from lakes and rivers and there are almost no toilets.

Diarrhoea is cheap and simple to treat– in the UK the medicine is free.

There is no National Health Service in Rwanda.You must buy your own medicines.

If you cannot afford the few cents for medicine,you die.

If you do not treat diarrhoea, you dehydrate. Eventually this kills you.

Page 35: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

6,000 children globally die of diarrhoeaevery day.

In Rwanda, 20% of children don’t reach their 5th birthday.10% don’t reach their 1st.

The biggest killer is diarrhoea.

Page 36: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Even if you grow your own food, you still need money.

How old do you think he is?

He is actually 15. He is very small for his age.

This child cannot afford even second-hand clothes, and wears plastic bags instead.

Page 37: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

29% of children in Rwanda are clinically underweight.

43% will have their growth stunted by malnutrition.

50% of people in the UK are clinically overweight.

23% of people in the UK are clinically obese.

Page 38: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Beatrice is 43 years old, and would like you to know that she considers herself to be very poor. She says she cannot afford to buy clothes or medicine, or to mend the leaking roof of her house. She finds it very difficult to afford to send her children to school.

Beatrice is a coffee grower who works in a co-operative.

Does she look rich or poor to you?

What tells you this?

How old do you think she is?

She says she feels powerless in the face of the falling price of coffee.

Page 39: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Life expectancy in the UKis 81 years - and rising.

In Rwanda it is 39 years - and falling.

Page 40: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Seraphina’s greater income means that her diet is better, that she can buy nice clothes, that she has the time to have her hair done and the extra cash to buy some modest jewellery.

Seraphina works in a Fairtradeco-operative.

Seraphina also works for a coffee co-operative.

Do you think she is richer or poorer than Beatrice? Why?

Seraphina has a greater income than Beatrice because the type of co-operative she works in is different.

Page 41: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

that coffee growers can have the confidence to invest in their own future and be able to work their own way out of poverty.

Fairtrade is an agreement between coffee sellers and buyers. It bypasses the big multinational companies.

Fairtrade means:

• long term commitment to buy

Guarantees a better deal for

Third World Producers

• guaranteed minimum prices for producers – up to 3 times more

• premium for community support e.g. health and education

• commitment to protect human rights and the environment

• certification and training

Page 42: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Abahuzamugambi Co-operative

‘working together to develop ourselves’

Seraphina works in the

in Maraba, Rwanda.

Page 43: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The story of Abahuzamugambi’s coffee starts with the flowers in August.

Sadly, they don’t smell of coffee.

Page 44: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

By May the next year, the coffee cherries are ripe to be picked.

Page 45: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Then the cherries are brought to the co-operative. Here, the cherries are being checked by (left to right), the grower, the president of the Co-op, Oswald, and Olive, who’s in charge of selection.

Page 46: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Then the cherries are weighed by Alexis.

Page 47: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Then they are put into water. The best quality cherries are the densest, so any that float are taken out.

Because Rwanda is quite cool due to its altitude, the cherries grow slowly, which makes them denser.

There is a natural enzyme on the surface of the cherry which eats the sugar in the skin, fermenting it; this affects the flavour later on, so has to be controlled very carefully.

Page 48: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Still in the water, the cherries then have the skins sloughed off by these machines.

Each cherry has two beans inside.

Page 49: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The beans then go into this water slide. It has a gentle gradient – 1 degree. The densest cherries settle first; the lighter are carried further by the current. This ingeniously automatically grades the beans.

Page 50: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The beans are then washed 5 times in clean spring water…

…until they squeak like a little tree frog when rubbed.

Page 51: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

By this stage the beans have been through a lot, so they are laid out to rest in the shade for a day.

Page 52: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Then they are laid out in the sun for two weeks to dry, being constantly turned by hand to ensure they dry evenly. The skins are now crisp, and the beans are known as ‘parchment’ coffee.

Page 53: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The beans are checked by hand again (by Seraphina) then this skin is removed by a machine, operated by Cansius.

The beans are now what is called ‘green’ coffee.

Page 54: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

After a final hand check, the beans are sacked up ready for export.

Page 55: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

In London, a company called Union Coffee Roasters roasts the beans.

Here, Steven is hand-roasting the beans.

The coffee is then ground and packaged.

Page 56: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Here you can see the three stages of coffee:

parchment

green

roasted

Page 57: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

And here is the final product, on the supermarket shelves.

Page 58: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Coffee was first grown in Africa. Here, it is being brewed in a centuries-old ceremony in Ethiopia.

Thus there is a link between the trendy coffee lifestyle of today and the African coffee story.

Page 59: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

There is also a very direct link between our enjoyment of cappuccinos in coffee bars like this one in Kampala to the people who grow the coffee.

Page 60: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Jean-Marie Vianney is one of those people.

With the extra income from Fairtrade, he has been able to build a house, diversify his farm, invest in more coffee trees, buy clothes for his wife and send his children to secondary school.

But he still couldn’t afford to drink coffee.

Page 61: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

So Abahuzamugambi bought the equipment necessary to roast, grind and brew coffee.

So now growers like Venerande can taste the quality.

This enables them to improve the quality of the coffee, as they can taste the difference.

Page 62: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

The success of the co-op has improved life for others in the community. This new bank – the first in the village – was built for the co-op, but everyone can use it.

Page 63: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Many people are learning of the benefits of Fairtrade.

This is an article about the co-op which appeared in an Italian newspaper.

Page 64: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

This is another article about the co-op:

Page 65: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

This is another article about the co-op:

As you will see, its message is rather different….

Page 66: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

“FROM her smallholding in southern Rwanda, Beneconcille Murekezi pro-duces enough green coffee beans to ensure her three children get to school each day. That is some achievement, as Rwanda tentatively recovers from geno-cide 10 years ago.

As a member of a cooperative which sells coffee beans to a UK firm, Union Coffee Roasters, Murekezi, 38, is in a perilous position. In fact, she is in a poverty trap. There is a ceiling through which real improvements to her life and community cannot break through.

Murekezi and thousands of her co operative colleagues would like to process all the beans rejected by Union Coffee Roasters to produce their own roasted coffee. Micro bank loans would enable the co-op to invest in new machinery. But under arcane world trade rules known as tariff escalation, Murekezi's co-operative cannot 'add value' to their beans without incurring punitive financial penalties that would make the whole project unviable.

Page 67: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Why can’t Abahuzamugambi continue their success by exporting processed coffee rather than just green coffee?

Why aren’t they being allowed to work their way out of poverty?

So, what’s going on?

Page 68: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Which of these brands of instant coffees do you recognise?

If you live in a developed country, you probably only recognise Nescafé.

All these coffees, including the Nescafé, were bought in an African supermarket.

Page 69: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

So, how come you can buy Western instant coffee in Africa but you can’t buy African instant coffee in the West?

Nescafé comes from Switzerland, Dormans from Kenya, Star from Uganda and Africafe from Tanzania.

Page 70: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

There is much more profit to be made from processed goods like instant coffee than raw commodities like green coffee. So rich countries do everything they can to stop poor countries from selling processed goods. They do this to protect their own manufacturers. So:

Canada charges Kenya 12 times more to import processed coffee than raw coffee.

On average, rich countries charge poor countries tariffs (import taxes) which are 4 times higher than they charge other rich countries.

Aid rules have made it effectively illegal for poor countries to charge their own tariffs.

Page 71: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

There are other, ‘non-tariff’ barriers to poor countries selling processed goods.

Star coffee wanted to sell its ground coffee in Europe.

The European Union said that Star had to modernise its packaging.

The new packaging equipment required would have cost Star 7 years’ turnover.

Page 72: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Infrastructure:

If it’s so difficult to make a living from coffee…Why don’t they grow something else?

commodity market:Growers have spent a lot of capital and labour in their coffee plantations, and it’s what they know how to grow.

Investment:

It’s the same for almost all things that poor countries produce – sugar, cocoa…

If you grow something else, there is nowhere to sell it locally and no way to get it to market.

Page 73: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Fairtrade proves that trade can be fair and profitable.

And anyway:

sign in Uganda

Page 74: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Fairtrade’s great!

footballs, rice, skirts, mango chutney, red wine, cashew nuts, penne pasta, T shirts, Christmas puddings, Belgian chocolates, muesli, Easter eggs, trousers, sugar, furniture, shoes, mats, spices, sneakers, jewellery, mint sweets, jigsaws, greeting cards, Earl grey tea, biscuits, shirts, bags, choc chip cookies, cocoa powder, white wine, bananas…

What can I buy?

Where can I buy it?Oxfam, Co-operative supermarkets, your local Fairtrade shop, church groups, supermarkets, charity shops, mail order, the internet…

Page 75: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

• Tell the shops you buy thingsfrom that you want a Fairtradealternative – they do act.

• Write to Tony Blair and Gordon Brown; Charles Kennedy and Michael Howard: tell them to change the trade rules.

• Change your bank to an ethical one, and pressure your pension company to invest ethically.

• Buy Fairtrade… and tell your friends!

What can I do?

Page 76: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Download the accompanying booklet to this presentation free at…

For more information:

Page 77: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.
Page 78: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

www.makepovertyhistory.org.ukCampaign for trade justice, debt relief and better aid.

www.maketradefair.comAdvocacy for fairer trade rules.

www.co-operativebank.co.ukEthical and green high street banking services.

www.eiris.orgEthical investment advice.

www.roughguide-betterworld.comThe Rough Guide to a Better World, according tothe UK’s Department for International Development…

Websites:

Page 79: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Also available free from the post office

“As a global community, we sink or swim together… It is precisely because parts of the developing world are cut off from the rising wealth generated through trade that some of them feel desperate. We should not be so surprised that such despair at the inequalities in wealth fosters anger and social tension – the kind, it must be admitted, which might even undermine global security and create the conditions in which terrorism can emerge.”

Page 80: & Coffee Fairtrade Rwanda. But when you buy a cappuccino in the high street, how much of the price you pay do you think goes to the person who produced.

Written by Jonathan [email protected]

Photography by Annie Chamberland, Rob Denton, Sara Edström, Julia di Mambro,

Jonathan Penson, Jeremy Torz andVSO Media Unit – www.vso.org.uk

&Coffee

FairtradeRwanda