Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers

Fair trade (FT), a movement that aims to set fair prices for products, alleviate poverty, and assist producers marginalized by the traditional economic model, lends itself to investigation through social capital (SC) lens as SC sits within the network theory area of management literature. The primar...

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Main Author: Bautista, Reynaldo A.
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Published: Animo Repository 2018
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2777
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Institution: De La Salle University
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-37762021-11-03T06:44:29Z Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers Bautista, Reynaldo A. Fair trade (FT), a movement that aims to set fair prices for products, alleviate poverty, and assist producers marginalized by the traditional economic model, lends itself to investigation through social capital (SC) lens as SC sits within the network theory area of management literature. The primary contribution of this paper is the analysis of whether FT impacts the dynamics of the different SC dimensions. This study used both quantitative and qualitative techniques. I surveyed 97 farmers from Atok (fair trade supplier) and 96 farmers from Tublay (non-fair trade supplier). Also, I conducted focus group discussions of 8 to 10 members from each group and in-depth interviews with formal and informal leaders and key-informants (buyer and local government leaders). The t-test revealed that the farmer cooperative that supplies to FT organization has a significantly higher tendency to ask support from non-government organizations (NGO) and financial institutions. Likewise, they have a higher score in collective action and perceived economic performance. Additionally, regression analysis showed that trust in local government unit (LGU), empowerment, and cooperative classification are positive predictors of perceived economic performance while trust in NGO and membership expansion have negative effects on perceived economic performance. © 2018 by De La Salle University. 2018-07-01T07:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2777 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Fair trade associations--Philippines Coffee growers--Philippines Social capital (Sociology) Infrastructure (Economics) Marketing
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Fair trade associations--Philippines
Coffee growers--Philippines
Social capital (Sociology)
Infrastructure (Economics)
Marketing
spellingShingle Fair trade associations--Philippines
Coffee growers--Philippines
Social capital (Sociology)
Infrastructure (Economics)
Marketing
Bautista, Reynaldo A.
Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers
description Fair trade (FT), a movement that aims to set fair prices for products, alleviate poverty, and assist producers marginalized by the traditional economic model, lends itself to investigation through social capital (SC) lens as SC sits within the network theory area of management literature. The primary contribution of this paper is the analysis of whether FT impacts the dynamics of the different SC dimensions. This study used both quantitative and qualitative techniques. I surveyed 97 farmers from Atok (fair trade supplier) and 96 farmers from Tublay (non-fair trade supplier). Also, I conducted focus group discussions of 8 to 10 members from each group and in-depth interviews with formal and informal leaders and key-informants (buyer and local government leaders). The t-test revealed that the farmer cooperative that supplies to FT organization has a significantly higher tendency to ask support from non-government organizations (NGO) and financial institutions. Likewise, they have a higher score in collective action and perceived economic performance. Additionally, regression analysis showed that trust in local government unit (LGU), empowerment, and cooperative classification are positive predictors of perceived economic performance while trust in NGO and membership expansion have negative effects on perceived economic performance. © 2018 by De La Salle University.
format text
author Bautista, Reynaldo A.
author_facet Bautista, Reynaldo A.
author_sort Bautista, Reynaldo A.
title Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers
title_short Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers
title_full Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers
title_fullStr Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers
title_full_unstemmed Dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers
title_sort dynamics of social capital among fair trade and non-fair trade coffee farmers
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 2018
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/2777
_version_ 1718382498526789632