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34. She/They. Lesbian. Black person. "Alternative". Lots of wrestling. Neurodivergent. Do NOT follow me if you disagree with #BlackLivesMatter....DO NOT follow me or reblog me if you are a TERF or SWERF !!! Radfems DNI
The local population in countries that export bananas typically eat different
varieties grown primarily by small farmers. The ones for the
Americans and the Europeans, Cavendish variety bananas, are grown in huge, monoculture
plantations that are susceptible to disease. The banana industry consumes more
agrichemicals than any other in the world, asides from cotton. Most plantations
will spend more on pesticides than on wages. Pesticides are sprayed by plane,
85% of which does not land on the bananas and instead lands on the homes of workers
in the surrounding area and seeps into the groundwater. The results are
cancers, stillbirths, and dead rivers.
The supermarkets dominate the banana trade and force the
price of bananas down. Plantations resolve this issue by intensifying and degrading
working conditions. Banana workers will work for up to 14 hours
a day in tropical heat, without overtime pay, for 6 days a week. Their wages
will not cover their cost of housing, food, and education for their children. On
most plantations independent trade unions are, of course, suppressed. Contracts
are insecure, or workers are hired through intermediaries, and troublemakers
are not invited back.
Who benefits most from this arrangement? The
export value of bananas is worth $8bn - the retail value of these bananas is
worth $25bn. Here’s a breakdown of who gets what from the sale of banana in the
EU.
On average, the banana workers get between 5 and 9% of the
total value, while the retailers capture between 36 to 43% of the value. So if
you got a bunch of bananas at Tesco (the majority of UK bananas come from Costa
Rica) for 95p, 6.65p would go to the banana workers, and 38p would go to Tesco.
Furthermore, when it comes to calculating a country’s GDP
(the total sum of the value of economic activity going on in a country, which
is used to measure how rich or poor a country is, how fast its economy is
‘growing’ and therefore how valuable their currency is on the world market, how
valuable its government bonds, its claim on resources internationally…etc), the
worker wages, production, export numbers count towards the country producing
the banana, while retail, ripening, tariffs, and shipping & import will
count towards the importing country. A country like Costa Rica will participate
has to participate in this arrangement as it needs ‘hard’ (i.e. Western)
currencies in order to import essential commodities on the world market.
So for the example above of a bunch of Costa Rican bananas
sold in a UK supermarket, 20.7p will be added to Costa Rica’s GDP while 74.3p
will be added to the UK’s GDP. Therefore, the consumption of a banana in the UK
will add more to the UK’s wealth than growing it will to Costa Rica’s. The same
holds for Bangladeshi t-shirts, iPhones assembled in China, chocolate made with
cocoa from Ghana…it’s the heart of how the capitalism of the ‘developed’ economy
functions. Never ending consumption to fuel the appearance of wealth, fuelled
by the exploitation of both land and people in the global south.
Just realised I forgot to post the sources but I got this from Bananalink, a really cool organisation which supports banana workers’ unions in the UK’s supply chain, specifically these twopages.