Frontline World

GUATEMALA/MEXICO, Fair Grounds, May 2003


Related Features THE STORY
Synopsis of "Coffee Country"

YOUR COFFEE DOLLAR
Follow the Bean

INTERVIEW WITH SAM QUINONES
Covering Bitter Grounds

FACTS & STATS
History of Coffee, Fair Trade, Economics

LINKS & RESOURCES
Background on the Coffee Crisis

MAP

REACT TO THIS STORY

   

YOUR COFFEE DOLLAR By Kelly Whalen
GROWERS TRADERS SHIPPERS ROASTERS RETAILERS
Now you have a chance to decide how much of your coffee dollar you want to allocate to each of the players in the commodity chain. Enter amounts in the boxes below, then click SUBMIT to see how your allocations compare to actual industry estimates.

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Roasted coffee beans

Sources include: International Coffee Organization; TransFair USA; Gregory Dicum and Nina Luttinger, The Coffee Book: Anatomy of an Industry From Crop to the Last Drop (New York City: The New Press, 1999); Laure Waridel, Coffee With Pleasure (Montreal: Black Rose Books, 2001); Mark Pendergrast, Uncommon Grounds: The History of Coffee and How It Transformed Our World (New York City: Basic Books, 1999); Faisal Islam, "Counting the Real Cost of a Cup of Coffee," Manchester Guardian Weekly (Jan. 1, 2003); Nicholas Stein, "Crisis in a Coffee Cup," Fortune Magazine (Dec. 9, 2002); Kim Bendheim, "Global Issues Flow Into America's Coffee," New York Times (Nov. 3, 2002); Peter Fritsch, "Coffee Bean Oversupply Deepens Latin America's Woes," The Wall Street Journal (July 8, 2002); John M. Talbot, "Information, Finance and the New International Inequality: The Case of Coffee," The Journal of World-Systems Research VII, no. 2 (spring 2002).

Photo credits: The photographs on the "Growers," "Local Traders," and "Your Allocations" pages are by Bill Kinzie, courtesy of Green Mountain Coffee Roasters.

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