Fair trade: alternativa ao mercado convencional de café e processos de empoderamento de cafeicultores familiares

This work uses the concepts of New Institutional Economy and Economic Sociology to explain the arising of the Mercado Fair Trade - MFT (Fair Trade Market), specifically the one connected to the family-agriculture coffee trade business chain. The theoretical dimension of empowerment is presented as t...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor: Pedini, Sérgio
Tipo de recurso: tesis doctoral
Estado:Versión publicada
Fecha de publicación:2011
País:Brasil
Institución:Universidade Federal de Lavras (UFLA)
Repositorio:Repositório Institucional da UFLA
Idioma:portugués
OAI Identifier:oai:repositorio.ufla.br:1/3090
Acceso en línea:https://repositorio.ufla.br/handle/1/3090
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:Administração
Mercado fair trade
Empoderamento
Certificação
Cafeicultores familiares
Grandes corporações
Fair trade market
Empowerment
Certification
Coffee small farmers
Large corporations
Descripción
Sumario:This work uses the concepts of New Institutional Economy and Economic Sociology to explain the arising of the Mercado Fair Trade - MFT (Fair Trade Market), specifically the one connected to the family-agriculture coffee trade business chain. The theoretical dimension of empowerment is presented as the distinguisher of the potential transformation that MFT can exert on certified organizations, subdivided in three levels: economical, psychological and cognitive. The aim was to assess how far MFT can modify the usual commodity coffee trade structure thus causing impact on the different actors in such production chain and, consequently, empower family coffee small farmers and their organizations. Specifically, this work studies the experimentation of a cooperative from the south of Minas Gerais state, one that is certified by the MFT and operating in the international market. In order to achieve the goal proposed, this work is based on bibliographical research and a field research, the latter being divided into a survey among coffee small farmers belonging to the organization under study and neighbor producers who are not affiliated under the same conditions, and a focus group featuring actors from the organizational environment of the cooperative. The results from the survey point out that only the cognitive aspects showed significant differences, thus enhancing the notion of the reality in which the farmers lives, individually, and his insertion in the debates of the environment in which the cooperative is inserted. The results from the work concerning the focus group do enhance the role of the MFT in the local organizational environment, under the scope of a net-like performance by the actors involved. One feature analyzed was the affiliation of large production and distribution corporations to the MFT and the inherent risk of loss of identity by that market as it draws away from its original principles. The conclusion reached is that the MFT tends to move towards consolidation, a process that was deflagrated with the incorporation of certification based on solid rules such as quality guarantee and traceability, now more than ever, as it begins to incorporate large economical corporations to the chain. Both the certifier and coffee small farmers must improve their skills, so as to keep track of such growth process. The criteria which solidify the MFT as a differentiated certification process with unique conventional market transformation features are what strengthen MFT as an alternative proposal. This paper points towards an urge for continuity in investigating, incorporating deeper studies on the economical-financial conditions of the participants as well as an investigation on the consumers, at the chain final link, as for the guiding principles of the MTF.