Investments for Indigenous Farmers in Guatemala

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Investments for Indigenous Farmers in Guatemala

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Title: Investments for Indigenous Farmers in Guatemala


1
Investments for Indigenous Farmers in Guatemala
  • ECE 410 Spring 2008
  • EDGE III Prejudice and Poverty
  • By Christopher Byers

2
Banana Republic The United Fruit Company
3
A Brief History
  • 1870 Captain Lorenzo Dow Baker started importing
    bananas from Jamaica for sale in the United
    States.
  • 1872 Minor C. Keith began planting bananas
    alongside a railroad he was constructing in Costa
    Rica.
  • 1885 Captain Baker and Jesse H. Freeman
    established the Boston Fruit Company.
  • 1899 Merger of Keith's railroad and banana
    companies with Boston Fruit created the United
    Fruit Company. Bought Snyder Brothers banana
    operations in Panama. Ships used for hauling
    bananas, painted white to reflect the sun, became
    known as the Great White Fleet. Company
    established first hospital for banana workers in
    Central America.
  • 1903 Company built first refrigerated ships,
    revolutionizing transportation of perishable
    foods. Company listed on New York Stock Exchange.

4
The Company's Great White Fleet was used to
transport bananas, tourists, and U.S. postal
service mail.  Company ships were also used at
the request of the U.S. government in both World
Wars, in the 1954 overthrow of the Guatemalan
government, and in the failed 1961 U.S. invasion
of Cuba.
5
  • 1904 Great White Fleet became major carrier of
    materials for building the Panama Canal. Began
    introducing radio communication to allow farms,
    ports, ships and markets to communicate and
    coordinate shipments.
  • 1906 Guatemala added as banana-producing
    operation.
  • 1913 Began operations in Honduras.
  • 1918 At the end of World War I, 13 Company ships
    had been lost, most commissioned by allied forces
    for the war effort.
  • 1927 Panama disease led to the expansion of
    banana production on the Pacific coast of Panama,
    and a decade later, in Costa Rica.
  • 1928 Colombian army killed an undetermined
    number of employees and others during labor
    protests.

6
  • 1941 World War II allied forces commissioned
    Company ships for the war effort and virtually
    shut down the banana industry. United Fruit
    founded prestigious Zamorano Agricultural College
    (EAP) in Honduras.
  • 1944 Introduced the Chiquita brand, Miss Chiquita
    character, and jingle.
  • 1945 By end of World War II, 27 ships, operating
    under Company administration, and 275 men were
    lost while serving allied forces.

7
  • 1950 Company began massive post-war banana
    replanting projects.
  • 1954 United Fruit ships were used in U.S.
    government-backed overthrow of the Guatemalan
    government.
  • 1958 U.S. antitrust decision forced United Fruit
    to sell an operating division sold a portion of
    Company holdings in Guatemala to Standard Fruit
    and local entrepreneurs.
  • 1960 The Republic of Cuba expropriated the
    Company's sugar cane operations in that country.
  • 1961 Company ships provided support for failed
    U.S. invasion of Cuba. Initiated sale of bananas
    in Japan.
  • 1963 Began largest-ever branding program for
    produce and pioneered banana stickers with
    Chiquita label. Most farms began conversion to
    Valery variety of bananas due to its resistance
    to Panama disease and windstorm losses.

8
The Chiquita Image
9
  • 1970 United Fruit merged with Eli Black's AMK
    Corporation and became the United Brands Company.
  • 1973 Introduced the first refrigerated container
    ships for transport of bananas. Sold remaining
    Guatemalan holdings to Del Monte to comply with
    antitrust ruling.
  • 1975 Involvement of United Brands in Honduran
    bribery scandal led to the enactment of the U.S.
    Foreign Corrupt Practices Act. Company stock
    plunged and Chairman and Chief Executive Eli
    Black committed suicide.
  • 1990 Changed name to Chiquita Brands
    International, Inc. and launched Chiquita Brands
    South Pacific.
  • 1992 European Union banana regime cut Chiquita's
    European market share by more than 50. Entered
    U.S. private label vegetable canning business
    through acquisition. Began working with
    Rainforest Alliance on the Better Banana Project.

10
  • 1997 Launched Chiquita-DeNadai joint venture in
    Asia and shipped first Chiquita bananas to China.
  • 1998 Became through acquisitions the largest U.S.
    private label vegetable canner. Became first
    major company to meet with COLSIBA, an
    affiliation of Latin American banana labor
    unions, concerning social responsibility issues.
    Hurricane Mitch wiped out Honduran division and
    damaged Guatemalan operations Company provided
    over 3 million in immediate relief.
  • 1999 Began 94 million farm rebuilding effort in
    Honduras and Guatemala.
  • 2000 Adopted Core Values and expanded Code of
    Conduct. All 127 Chiquita-owned farms in Latin
    America achieved certification to the standards
    of the Rainforest Alliance's Better Banana
    Project.

11
  • In 2001, COLSIBA coordinated an agreement with
    Chiquita.  Half of Chiquitas workers are
    unionized, and they make up 90 percent of the
    unionized banana workers in Latin America.  For
    whatever reasons, since the late 90s Chiquita
    had been positioning itself as the socially
    responsible banana corporation.  Through the
    good offices of the International Union of Food
    Workers, the global union federation for the food
    industry, an agreement was negotiated in which
    Chiquita pledged to respect worker rights.  The
    agreement established COLSIBA as the
    representative of banana workers throughout much
    of the region.  The agreement applies to
    anti-union activity by the company at its
    unionized plantations and protects the right of
    workers to organize at plantations that Chiquita
    owns or subcontracts with. How much protection
    the agreement will provide in practice is still
    being tested.  But it has already established two
    facts.  Even under extremely adverse conditions,
    people who work in the same industry or company
    can create links for cooperation and even joint
    bargaining across national boundaries.  And when
    they do so, they are likely to be a lot stronger
    than if they try to take on powerful global
    corporations one union or even one country at a
    time.

12
Chiquita in Guatemala Today
  • Another Guatemalan banana union leader shot dead
  • Submitted by David Ransom on March 12, 2008 -
    247pm.On March 2nd, Guatemalan banana union
    leader, Miguel Angel Ramirez of SITRABANSUR, was
    shot dead. SITRABANSUR, which is affiliated to
    Banana Links Guatemala partner union UNSITRAGUA,
    was founded by Miguel Ramirez and his fellow
    workers at the 'Olga Maria' plantation in the
    Pacific South of Guatemala in July 2007. Since
    then SITRABANSUR members have been harassed and
    threatened by private security hired by the
    company -Frutera Internacional Sociedad Anónima,
    supplier to Chiquita Brands- and 24 union members
    have been sacked. UNSITRAGUA has been working
    with SITRABANSUR to support these sacked workers
    and strengthen union organisation on the Olga
    Maria plantation. The murder of Miguel Angel
    Ramirez is just one of the many recent cases of
    violence against banana union leaders in
    Guatemala. In September 2007 SITRABI union
    leader, Marco Tulio Ramirez Portelo was also shot
    dead and just four weeks ago the daughter of the
    General Secretary of SITRABANSUR was raped by
    armed men.Pressure must be put on the
    Guatemalan government to ensure that the people
    responsible for these killings are brought to
    justice and the systematic violations of labour
    rights are put to a stop. As a result of a
    previous international campaign led by the IUF,
    EUROBAN and COLSIBA, the new Guatemalan
    president, Alvaro Colom, promised to take action
    so that the previous murder of SITRABI union
    leader Marco Tulio Ramirez is investigated by the
    authorities. Political pressure is needed to get
    EU governments to criticise the Guatemalan
    government for their lack of action on these
    violent and shocking cases of trade union
    repression and ensure that Alvaro Colom sticks to
    his commitments to end impunity and violence in
    Guatemala.

13
  • The production of bananas in Guatemala takes
    place in large monoculture plantations where
    labor conditions are very poor. Workers receive
    low wages which often dont cover the basic needs
    of their families and endure long 12-hour work
    days and exposure to dangerous chemicals. Yet
    employees lack the freedom to organize
    independent trade unions and negotiate agreements
    with their employers in order to improve these
    working conditions. Those who have tried to
    organize have come under attack from both
    transnational banana companies and independent
    banana producers. Illegal firings, plantation
    closures, temporary contracts, civil law suits,
    trumped up criminal charges, and violence
    targeting union leaders have all become
    commonplace. So far in 2007, four unionists have
    been assassinated in Guatemala and no charges
    have been made against the guilty parties.

14
The Next Chiquita Del Monte
  • Del Monte, the third largest producer of bananas,
    is owned and controlled by the Chilean-based IAT
    Group (their capital is held in the United Arab
    Emirates) and maintains its headquarters in
    Miami, Florida. As of 2005, Del Monte controlled
    about 15 of the world banana trade. Along with
    the other major banana producers like Chiquita
    and Dole, they yield a great deal of power in
    Latin America and can sell bananas to the
    northern markets at an extremely cut-rate price.
    According to a French research institute CIRAD,
    only 12 of the final retail price stays in the
    producing countries. An even smaller proportion
    goes to small farmers (5-7) or to plantation
    workers (1-3). The rest is profit in the
    pockets of the CEOs and investors.Bandegua,
    the Guatemalan subsidiary of Del Monte, is one of
    many companies with a long history of targeting
    trade unionists. In 1999, Bandegua dismissed 900
    workers who were involved in the Banana Workers
    Union of Izabal (SITRABI), the oldest and one of
    the most powerful unions in Guatemala. On October
    13th of that year, a heavily armed attack was led
    against the union organizers who were planning a
    massive protest in response to the dismissals.
    Consequently, seven members of SITRABI fled to
    the US to defend their lives and pursued a case
    against Bandegua. As a response, the US
    government placed Guatemala's trade benefits on
    probation until Guatemalan courts convicted the
    criminals. Unfortunately, due to the sustained
    violence in Guatemala, the seven organizers
    continue to live in the US.

15
Guatemala union heads killed despite US trade deal
  • By Mica RosenbergMORALES, Guatemala, Oct 17
    2007 (Reuters) - Masked gunmen dumped a
    Guatemalan banana picker's bullet-ridden corpse
    yards from fields of fruit bound for the United
    States, a grim reminder of the risks of
    organizing labor in the Central American country.
    Marco Tulio Ramirez, killed last month, was the
    fifth Guatemalan labor leader murdered this year.
    Activists say the deaths show promises to
    protect labor rights under a U.S. trade pact have
    changed little at a time President George W. Bush
    is pressing for similar deals in other Latin
    American nations with bad labor records. The
    Central American Free Trade Agreement, or CAFTA,
    was approved by the U.S. Congress in 2005 after a
    tough battle with Democrats who argued that
    worker safeguards in the agreement were too weak.
    CAFTA breaks down tariff barriers between
    Central American countries and the United States.
    It has increased Guatemala's export revenues and
    improved the investment climate in the country,
    the government says. Guatemala, which began
    implementing the pact last year, was notorious
    for labor abuses during its 36-year long civil
    war and rights are still weak. Opponents of
    CAFTA both in the United States and Central
    America complained that Washington should not
    encourage trade with countries like Guatemala
    without tougher rules to protect workers. The
    U.S. Trade Representative gave 40 million to
    spend in Guatemala on strengthening the labor
    ministry, resolving industrial disputes and
    monitoring work-related abuses. But little has
    changed. "Organizing a union in Guatemala is
    life-threatening," said Noe Ramirez, Marco
    Tulio's brother and the head of the banana
    workers' union SITRABI. "We know the Central
    American Free Trade Agreement has a chapter on
    labor protections, but it is not followed," he
    said, at the union's office in the town of
    Morales.FACTORIES CLOSEDBush urged Congress on
    Friday to approve pending free trade pacts with
    Colombia, Panama and Peru, saying failure to do
    so would reduce Washington's leadership in the
    region. Critics fiercely oppose the agreement
    with Colombia, where rights group Human Rights
    Watch says 72 trade unionists were killed last
    year. "I oppose continuing the same failed
    CAFTA-style trade model in other countries," said
    Rep. Linda Sanchez, a California Democrat.
    "Colombia is one of the most dangerous countries
    in the world for labor organizers, more so than
    even Guatemala. Abuses are common across the
    Guatemalan economy, especially in textile
    factories known as maquilas, where workers put in
    long hours for little pay. Activists say
    companies often close factories when workers try
    form unions. In January, Pedro Zamora, head of
    Guatemala's port workers' union, was murdered in
    front of his two sons in the middle of
    contentious negotiations between the union and
    company bosses. Two leaders of the municipal
    vendors' union were killed a month later. In
    1999, SITRABI leaders were forced to resign after
    200 armed men threatened them ahead of a planned
    strike. Seven still live in exile in the United
    States. In July, soldiers raided the SITRABI
    union's office asking to see information about
    members. The ministry of defense later said the
    action was unjustified. Since Ramirez's death,
    suspicious cars have followed union members on
    and off the company's property, his brother said.
    Such intolerance of labor unions has a long
    history. Hundreds of union members were murdered
    or 'disappeared' by state security forces during
    the country's 1960-1996 civil war between the
    army and left-wing rebels. The war began after a
    coup backed by banana company United Fruit, now
    known as Chiquita Brands International. United
    Fruit sold many of its plantations, including the
    ones where Ramirez worked, to Fresh Del Monte
    Produce Inc. Representatives from the Fresh Del
    Monte Produce subsidiary Ramirez was employed by
    said they have nothing to do with his killing and
    urged authorities to conduct a full
    investigation.

16
Whos Land is it Anyway?Land Reform and Conflict
in GuatemalaBy LISA VISCIDI
  • In rural Guatemala, poor mostly indigenous
    farmers scrape off a living on the nations
    poorest soils while wealthy finca (large
    plantation) owners reap the benefits of an
    agricultural system based on international
    exports and the exploitation of cheap labor.
    Guatemala has one of the most skewed land
    distribution patterns in the world and the second
    most inequitable in Latin America--roughly 2
    percent of the population owns 70 percent of all
    productive farmland. This has led to fierce and
    often violent land conflicts between poor
    campesinos (farmers) and a powerful landed elite
    that maintains dominance vis-a-vis close ties to
    the government.

17
A Brief History of Land Rights in Guatemala
  • Guatemalas inequitable land distribution system
    is rooted in the Spanish conquest, when land
    seized from the indigenous populations was
    granted to colonizers. The Spanish usurped the
    nations richest soils and exploited the
    indigenous labor force in order to sell products
    such as sugar and cacao on European markets.
    Indigenous farmers were relocated to the most
    unproductive farmlands where they barely survived
    off of subsistence farming.

18
  • Independence from Spain in 1821 brought few
    rewards to Guatemalas rural indigenous
    population. The emerging class of wealthy ladinos
    (non-indigenous) gained increasing control over
    land and labor. Coffee became the nations
    largest export, and a powerful elite of coffee
    growers forced farmers to abandon their lands in
    order to further agribusiness interests. As
    communal land tenure disappeared and export crop
    growers forced indigenous villagers to relocate
    to less productive highland areas, many
    campesinos were compelled to migrate to coastal
    plantations in search of work.

19
  • Land ownership became increasingly concentrated
    until Guatemalan President Jacobo Arbenz
    initiated the Agrarian Reform Law of 1952, which
    called for the expropriation of mostly idle lands
    from large plantation owners to be redistributed
    to poor farmers. The reform, which benefited an
    estimated 100,000 families, threatened the
    holdings of large landowners and powerful foreign
    companies, especially the North American-owned
    United Fruit Company.

20
  • Under the guise of combating communism, the U.S.
    government ordered a CIA-orchestrated coup to
    oust Arbenz in 1954. The democratically-elected
    president was replaced by a U.S.-backed general
    who annulled the majority of the land
    expropriations, returning the territory to its
    previous owners. In the following decades a civil
    war ensued, pitting military dictatorships
    against a leftist guerilla insurgency. The best
    lands were rewarded to military officers and rich
    land-owners tied to the military regimes, thus
    cementing the system of inequitable land
    distribution.

21
  • Land ownership was one of the most controversial
    components of the 1996 Peace Accords, which
    charged the state with the task of providing land
    to peasant farmers. The stipulations of the
    accords, however, have yet to be implemented, and
    Guatemala remains a panorama of inequality and
    poverty-- the same ills that have devastated the
    nation since the Spanish conquest.

22
The Solution Farmer Co-ops
  • Today, Guatemala has the largest rural population
    in Central America-over 60 percent of its
    inhabitants depend on agriculture to survive. Yet
    available land is shrinking as rural families
    grow and expansive tracts devoted to export
    agriculture are concentrated into fewer hands.
    The United States and international institutions
    such as the World Bank have pressured Guatemala
    to employ an agricultural export model that
    allows multinational food corporations and
    wealthy finca owners to reap the benefits of the
    countrys rich agricultural environment and cheap
    labor source, while the majority of the
    population survives on tiny subsistence-oriented
    plots.

23
La Asociacion Civil Maya de Productores of Santa
Anita
  • 32 Families representing about 170 people
  • All ex-combatants of Guat Revolutionary Unity
  • Annual Production - 40,000 pounds of coffee
  • All coffee, bananas are organic
  • Founded in 1998, Joined FLO register in 2001
  • Altitude of finca is approximately 4,000 ft
  • Future Plans Pay off debt, dev other income

24
  • The association at Santa Anita is made up of 32
    families of ex-combatants from the Guatemalan
    Revolutionary Unity or URNG. With the signing of
    the Peace Accords, the association was able to
    purchase an abandoned plantation in February of
    1998. Working collectively, the members have
    recovered the lands production capacity.
    Approximately 65 of the 130-acre holding is in
    coffee and banana production the remaining
    acres are either too steep for any type of
    cultivation or have been left purposely in a
    natural state to conserve the existing ecology.

25
  • The cooperative's values reflect the URNGs 36
    year-long struggle to create a society based upon
    mutual respect and democracy. Now they are
    leading by example. Santa Anita has a "no-kill"
    environmental policy, which mandates that no
    indigenous animals within its confines can be
    killed. Additionally, their board of directors
    has to be composed of at least 50 women at all
    times. Free education and healthcare are provided
    to all of the communitys residents.

26
  • Data from the Organic Trade Association's 2007
    Manufacturer Survey of the 2006 market indicated
    that U.S. organic coffee sales amounted to
    approximately 110 million in 2006, up 24 percent
    from the previous year. Other studies show the
    figure could be much higher. A 2007 survey by
    Giovannucci and the Sustainable Markets
    Intelligence Center (CIMS) reported that
    approximately 65 million pounds of organic coffee
    were imported into the United States in 2006 with
    a retail value of approximately 617 million. The
    authors estimate the organic coffee sector
    represented 2.3 percent of the total U.S. green
    coffee imports in 2006. The 33 percent annual
    average growth rate for the organic category
    documented by the researchers between 2000 and
    2007 dwarfs the estimated 1.5-2 percent projected
    annual growth rate of the conventional coffee
    industry. Organic coffee is grown in 40 countries
    worldwide.

27
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  • The market reality and various studies show that
    consumers are indeed interested in organic coffee
    and are prepared to pay a premium.
    Coffee-drinkers pay an average of 15 to 25
    percent more for organic and 20 to 50 percent
    more for Fair Trade organic coffee than they
    would for conventionally grown coffee.

30
  • The same is true for Fair Trade bananas.
    Especially in the EU the demand has increased
    over 50 a year the past few years and continues
    to grow

31
What is Fair Trade Certification
  • Fair Trade Certification empowers farmers and
    farm workers to lift themselves out of poverty by
    investing in their farms and communities,
    protecting the environment, and developing the
    business skills necessary to compete in the
    global marketplace. Fair Trade is much more than
    a fair price!  Fair Trade principles include
  • Fair price Democratically organized farmer
    groups receive a guaranteed minimum floor price
    and an additional premium for certified organic
    products. Farmer organizations are also eligible
    for pre-harvest credit.
  • Fair labor conditions Workers on Fair Trade
    farms enjoy freedom of association, safe working
    conditions, and living wages. Forced child labor
    is strictly prohibited.
  • Direct trade With Fair Trade, importers purchase
    from Fair Trade producer groups as directly as
    possible, eliminating unnecessary middlemen and
    empowering farmers to develop the business
    capacity necessary to compete in the global
    marketplace.

32
  • Democratic and transparent organizations Fair
    Trade farmers and farm workers decide
    democratically how to invest Fair Trade revenues.
  • Community development Fair Trade farmers and
    farm workers invest Fair Trade premiums in social
    and business development projects like
    scholarship programs, quality improvement
    trainings, and organic certification.
  • Environmental sustainability Harmful
    agrochemicals and GMOs are strictly prohibited in
    favor of environmentally sustainable farming
    methods that protect farmers health and preserve
    valuable ecosystems for future generations.

33
Investment Proposal
  • Currently only 13.2 of Guatemalas land is
    arable and 5.6 is being used for permanent
    crops. That leaves 81.18 being used for other
    purposes according to the CIA fact book as of
    2005. So Guatemala is 108,430 sq km in land mass
    total. 13.2 of 108,430 sq km gives 14,313 sq km
    for food production if all arable land is put to
    use for this purpose. We will assume that not
    all of this land is currently being used for food
    production because if that was the case then
    nothing more could be done to increase the food
    production. Based on some real estate sites I
    have looked at for farm type properties I will
    assume a price of 10,000 an acre. I will also
    use the Santa Anita coop as a reference since
    they have a very successful coop. Their property
    is 130 acres so at 10k an acre the farm purchase
    would be 1.3M. Then assuming that the terrain
    is similar to that of the Santa Anita coop you
    can use 65 of the land for crop production. I
    would like to use 20 of the arable land for
    local food supply production so that would be 13
    of the total farm. That leaves 52 of the farms
    land for export crop production. This could be
    corn, sugarcane, coffee, or bananas. So if we
    assume all that is put into coffee production
    that gives us 67.6 acres of coffee. Since Santa
    Anita coop uses 65 of their land to produce both
    bananas and coffee I will assume that the portion
    that is producing bananas is what would be used
    to produce food for the local population to
    secure their food supply.

34
  • So if production is the same as at Santa Anita we
    would be producing 40k pounds of coffee a year.
    If 100 pounds costs 59.04 to produce then 40k
    pounds would cost 23,616. Assuming the cost to
    produce their food supply would be similar then I
    would say 5k for the region food supply
    production. So total cost for the farm purchase
    and first year of production would be 1.3M
    23,616 5k 1,328,616. The price on table 3
    is far below the Fair Trade minimum. So if we use
    the Fair Trade minimum for organic coffee the
    price would be 151/qq. Using that value and
    keeping production costs the same, the net income
    for 100 pounds would be 91.96. If 40k pound of
    coffee was sold at that price is would produce a
    net profit of 36,784. That is over and above a
    fair wage being paid to all coop workers that is
    taken into the production costs. So this excess
    could be used for debt reduction, social
    services, coop improvement or other investments.
    So after just one year they could pay for all
    their production cost the next year and also have
    money left over to repay some of the initial loan
    amount.

35
  • This investment model is very promising and
    uplifting to the indigenous people. It would
    allow them to become self sufficient as far as
    their food supply goes and produce extra income
    for a better standard of living. So let us just
    say that OPEC wanted to donate .25 of the
    projected windfall profits from its oil sales for
    one year into this project. Assume the oil
    profits are 1.5 trillion a year. They are
    probably a bit more now with oil prices climbing
    every day but it is a good starting number. .25
    of 1.5 trillion is 3.75 billion. Let us just
    say there are other costs in starting the coop
    that would bring the initial loan up to 1.5M.
    That means that only .25 of one years profit
    would provide loans for 2500 coops like Santa
    Anita. If the coop was similar in size to Santa
    Anita at about 170 people that would provide for
    425,000 people to improve their living situation
    drastically and secure their food supply.

36
  • So with a total population around 13 million and
    50 are currently working in agriculture. You
    have 6.5 million people who could benefit from
    this plan. If you were able to increase the
    funding a little over 15 times then you could
    provide coops to the entire country of
    agriculture workers. With 4 of the OPEC profits
    for one year you could create more than enough
    coops to provide jobs for all the current
    agriculture workers in the country while at the
    same time creating greater food security for the
    region. This would be assuming all the coops
    were growing coffee as the export crop. You
    could of course set a percentage of the coops to
    grow whatever is needed as long as the crop would
    produce a net profit enough to pay back the debt.
    It is just amazing what you can accomplish with
    enough money. This investment proposal shows how
    only a small percentage of just one years profits
    from OPEC can completely change the lives of an
    entire country for the better.
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