Jaime Baquero":1sfvj4vq said:
Mike,
If importers don't give a sh***, why retailers support them? Is because retailers do not give a sh**?
Ding, Ding, Ding! Jaime gets the prize...
10% increase ... please be serious! 10% of close to nothing is nothing!
No, Jaime, it is not zero plus 10%... It is something plus 10%. It is the difference between getting a chicken this week or not. You've seen the poverty, have been there, and know this to be true.
I'm not the one going to PTFEA to tell them to pay more to the collectors. It is the task of the importers in the states to stop complaining because of price increase.
Jaime, again, you are making really horrible assumptions in your arguments.
Let's put things into simpler terms so that everyone here can understand them in Western terms. You want T-shirts. Plain ol' white t-shirts. You expect to pay $2 each for them just about anywhere.
Today you walk into JC Penney (Pick your favorite retail store, name does not matter...). You walk in expecting to pick up a whole bunch of T-shirts today because your cat attacked all your existing T-shirts and they are in tatters. You need 50 new ones... You get to the T-shirt aisle and notice that... Hey, The T-shirts are now $2.40 instead of $2.00. (Or to use your example, they are now $10 instead of $2...) You realize suddenly that these T-shirts are now way expensive, and that you do not have enough money in your wallet to buy all the T-shirts you need...
You freeze. Then suddenly, it dawns on you... Gee, there is a Target next door to here... I wonder what they are charging... You walk on over to Target and find out that those nice comfortable Hanes T-shirts you wanted at $2.00 are selling for $1.99, right where you thought that they should be.
You buy all fifty, thankful in knowing that you have a choice in places to shop...
To bring it all on back home,
if the Philippines unilaterally raised the prices of its fish by 100%, the US importers would go shopping elsewhere, namely Indonesia.
Guess what happens now to all those PI villages who pinned their economic hopes on MO collection? They have nowhere now to sell their fish, Jaime. Your analysis assumes that the US importers have nowhere else to shop when, in fact, they do.
We, Haribon and OVI as NGOs, do see things in a different way. When we work at community level, we see many things that importers, retailers and hobbyists overseas can not imagine:
We see poverty at fisherfolks villages.
We see how fisherfolks they DO risk their lives, when diving, to satisfy the industry's demand.
We see the equipment they use to dive and the health hazards due to unfiltered air they inhale.
We see how collectors they do leave their families for extended periods of time to go fishing further and further away in dangerous seas because the grounds they used to fish before are empty, no fish (overexploitation and cyanide use).
We see coral reef destruction, we see that all this is happening (in part) because of the impact of this industry.
Collectors have been doing this for decades. We see how collectors have been ignored and exploited.
Do you agree with the actual industry set up, regarding fish prices, in the Philippines?
Of course not.
Are you saying that collectors shouldn't get a decent price for their fish today, and that they must keep pressure on the reefs to collect enough cheap fish to assure them of enough earnings to provide for the family subsistence?
Um, what ever on earth would give you this idea, Jaime?
The PTFEA has a published recommended buying price list for its members. Lolita negotiated a higher price for the MAC folks, which is roughly 25% higher than the published price, after she subsidizes the freight. According to my sources, at least two other net-caught only exporters pay their net-caught fishermen over and above this pricing level.
The fishermen getting this increased pricing are happy.
Roger Hernandez was finally able to afford new material for his leaking roof. Many other collectors in Palauig are finally able to start building homes, out of cement block instead of bamboo. They are getting more to eat, and better food as well. These changes are happening now, because of the efforts of a very few people who are not involved with any NGOs, but are concerned with getting the industry to change from within.
And all of this from starting with a 10% pricing increase...
Regards.
Mike Kirda