Abstract

While the market for sustainably certified products grows, the debate on whether smallholder farmers benefit from this certification movement is far from over. We present empirical findings across three continents. Identical household surveys were conducted among 738 smallholder coffee farmers organized in primary cooperatives in Ethiopia, India and Nicaragua. The comparative analysis which is based on the propensity score matching approach shows that the impacts of Fairtrade certification on coffee yields and income vary across countries. In Ethiopia, the coffee farmers from Fairtrade certified cooperatives fare worse than their non-certified counterparts both in coffee yield and income. In the Indian case study, the Fairtrade cooperative members have yield and price advantages over the non-certified farmers. This has in turn led to higher net revenue from coffee for certified farmers. In Nicaragua, coffee farmers from Fairtrade and double (Fairtrade-Organic) certified cooperatives also benefit in terms of net revenue but there is no statistically significant effect on yield and household income. A comparison of the Fairtrade minimum floor price and the weight-equivalent Fairtrade cooperative price in the three countries shows that Nicaraguan Fairtrade certified farmers have obtained a higher average price than the Fairtrade mandated minimum price, whereas in Ethiopia the certified farmers received a much lower price. In India, the certified average price was closer to the minimum floor price. We conclude that coffee cooperatives and the motivation and capability of their staff play a central role in training their member farmers about each aspect of coffee growing and certification.

Highlights

  • In the last three decades, certification of tropical commodities has become a “flagship program” that aims at promoting several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) such as decreasing poverty (SDG 1) or sustainable production and consumption (SDG 12) (UN., 2020)

  • Based on our empirical case studies in Ethiopia, India and Nicaragua, the quantitative findings of this paper show that certification on average has a differential impact in the three countries and this impact is highly case- and contextspecific

  • Compared to Ethiopia, a significantly higher proportion of cooperative members in Nicaragua have received credits from their cooperative

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Summary

Introduction

In the last three decades, certification of tropical commodities (coffee, bananas, cacao, etc.) has become a “flagship program” that aims at promoting several Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) such as decreasing poverty (SDG 1) or sustainable production and consumption (SDG 12) (UN., 2020). Voluntary certification schemes for coffee such as Fairtrade or Organic aim at creating new opportunities for smallholder coffee producers in the international coffee value chain. The Fairtrade system focuses on poverty reduction and works with minimum prices as a safety net for farmers at times of low world market prices. It aims at ensuring fair labor standards and claims being genderinclusive (Fairtrade Foundation, n.d.). Organic certification is a process-based certification scheme where strict standards are set for input use due to environmental and health concerns (Parvathi et al, 2018). Prices of Organic products are normally higher than for non-certified ones and compensate for often lower yields and more labor input. Prices for Organic-certified products are a result of negotiations between seller and buyer and are not regulated as, e.g., for Fairtrade-certified products (IFOAM., 2015)

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