Banana industry in the Caribbean
ARACATACA, COLOMBIA - MARCH 14: Young Colombian workers prepare the aircable to transport bananas at a banana plantation on March 14, 2006 in Aracataca, Colombia. Eighty percent of the exported bananas in the world are grown in Latin America. Local farms have no other alternative than to sell for a price offered by the multinational company. When working conditions (workers on the plantations are hired on a monthly-contract basis) and ecology (some pesticides used on the banana plantations are forbidden in Europe and in the US) is in question, the corporations do not have any responsibility as they do not own plantations. Local governments in the attempt of organizing banana export provide low duty taxes on export, they try to eliminate social and enviromental politics to attract the big companies to their countries. (Photo by Jan Sochor/Latincontent/Getty Images)
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Editorial #:
156543313
Collection:
LatinContent Editorial
Date created:
March 14, 2006
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LatinContent Editorial
Object name:
soja01368
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- Adult,
- Agriculture,
- Banana,
- Boys,
- Business Finance and Industry,
- Chain - Object,
- Chemical,
- Child,
- Colombia,
- Crop - Plant,
- Cultures,
- Danger,
- Dirt,
- Emigration and Immigration,
- Environment,
- Farm,
- Food,
- Fruit,
- Hand,
- Harvesting,
- Heat - Temperature,
- Latin America,
- Latin American and Hispanic Ethnicity,
- Men,
- Nature,
- Outdoors,
- People,
- Plantation,
- Poisonous,
- Poverty,
- Preparation,
- Problems,
- Protection,
- Rainforest,
- Shadow,
- Sky,
- South America,
- Sweat,
- Transportation,
- Tree,
- Tropical Climate,
- USA,
- Unemployment,
- Unhygienic,
- Waist Up,
- Wet,
- Working,