An economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade

Fair-trade is investigated at three levels. Each level relates to a specific group of actors. The first group are the consumers of fair-trade. In this respect fair-trade overlaps with altruism. A model is developed which seeks out parameters by which to judge whether or not a person will engage into...

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Main Author: Telford, Steven
Published: Queen Mary, University of London 2011
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Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.554364
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-5543642019-02-27T03:23:07ZAn economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-tradeTelford, Steven2011Fair-trade is investigated at three levels. Each level relates to a specific group of actors. The first group are the consumers of fair-trade. In this respect fair-trade overlaps with altruism. A model is developed which seeks out parameters by which to judge whether or not a person will engage into this gesture of altruism, and accordingly measures the fair-trade utility of the consumer. On the basis that it is voluntary, fair-trade is deemed to be virtuous in that it either uplifts consumer utility, or else the consumer withdraws their patronage. Information is hypothesised to play a key role in determining the depth of this relationship. The second group are neighbouring producers, that is the non fair-trade producers who compete in the same market. A situation is modelled in which fair-trade is viewed as a switch in demand preference rather than new demand. The model allows an evaluation based on the standard tenets of welfare economics: to inform upon which movements are value-creating, which are merely transfers, the symmetry of those transfers and where Pareto improvements can and cannot be realised. The policymaker is afforded a logical overview, but with the implication that many of the relevant variables may be lie beyond their direct influence. The third group are landless vineyard labours in South Africa who are empirically analysised. We observed the strongest performance of fair-trade with respect to subjective improvement in wellbeing and the sort of participation that could be categorised as empowerment.358.522Queen Mary, University of Londonhttps://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.554364http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/7781Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 358.522
spellingShingle 358.522
Telford, Steven
An economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade
description Fair-trade is investigated at three levels. Each level relates to a specific group of actors. The first group are the consumers of fair-trade. In this respect fair-trade overlaps with altruism. A model is developed which seeks out parameters by which to judge whether or not a person will engage into this gesture of altruism, and accordingly measures the fair-trade utility of the consumer. On the basis that it is voluntary, fair-trade is deemed to be virtuous in that it either uplifts consumer utility, or else the consumer withdraws their patronage. Information is hypothesised to play a key role in determining the depth of this relationship. The second group are neighbouring producers, that is the non fair-trade producers who compete in the same market. A situation is modelled in which fair-trade is viewed as a switch in demand preference rather than new demand. The model allows an evaluation based on the standard tenets of welfare economics: to inform upon which movements are value-creating, which are merely transfers, the symmetry of those transfers and where Pareto improvements can and cannot be realised. The policymaker is afforded a logical overview, but with the implication that many of the relevant variables may be lie beyond their direct influence. The third group are landless vineyard labours in South Africa who are empirically analysised. We observed the strongest performance of fair-trade with respect to subjective improvement in wellbeing and the sort of participation that could be categorised as empowerment.
author Telford, Steven
author_facet Telford, Steven
author_sort Telford, Steven
title An economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade
title_short An economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade
title_full An economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade
title_fullStr An economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade
title_full_unstemmed An economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade
title_sort economic enquiry into the welfare effects of fair-trade
publisher Queen Mary, University of London
publishDate 2011
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.554364
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