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Switzerland is one the world’s top countries in terms of per capita consumption of fair trade products. But there is a significant difference between the two societies regarding the use of products that provide a guarantee to buyers that the producers and workers receive fair prices and a fair wage. Germans spend comparatively little on these products. That’s surprising, as Germany is not so different from Switzerland in terms of its economic and social development. Sociologists at the University of Zurich joined forces with the Institute for Social-Ecological Research in Frankfurt to carry out research into the reasons for this country-specific difference. They surveyed around 3,900 inhabitants of the cities of Zurich and Cologne and analyzed the opportunities to buy fair trade products in those cities.
Evaluating the data shows that differences in income are not significant for the higher consumption level in Switzerland, although the Swiss respondents have higher purchasing power than their German counterparts on average. Instead, better availability of fair trade products in the shops in Zurich increases consumption. Above all else, it is the stronger ethical push to buy fair trade products in Switzerland that is the decisive factor: “It is primarily differences in attitudes and the market structure that are responsible for the higher consumption level. Differences in purchasing power do not appear to play a role,” says Jörg Rössel, Professor of Sociology at the University of Zurich.
Not only did the authors of the study examine the differences between Switzerland and Germany, they also looked at differences between Swiss people and German people living in Zurich. While there are differences between Swiss people and Germans who have recently arrived to live in Zurich, these differences disappear the longer the Germans stay. “Over time, the divided social context appears to lead to an adaptation of attitudes among those persons. As a result, consumption of fair trade products is also identical.” This is how Patrick Schenk, an assistant at the Institute of Sociology at the University of Zurich, interprets this finding.
According to the authors, the fact that the surveys were carried out in two urban centers should not restrict the reliability of the results. On the contrary: choosing two urban areas enhances the comparability of the sample populations. For Georg Sunderer from the Institute for Social-Ecological Research, the findings demonstrate “the importance of the interaction between social context and individual attitudes in explaining the country-specific differences in the consumption of fair trade products.”
Are Swiss Germans more solidary than Germans? Comparing the consumption of fair trade products between Germany and Switzerland. Berliner Journal für Soziologie: 1–26. October 18, 2016. doi:10.1007/s11609-016-0312-4