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Food Safety: Understanding Types, Regulation, and Contaminants, Slides of Biology

Various aspects of food safety, including types of food safety problems, regulation, and the implications of food safety regulation. It also discusses the importance of food safety, the cost of unsafe food consumption, and the role of markets in ensuring food safety. The document also touches upon the issue of biological contaminants and the growing importance of private food safety innovations.

Typology: Slides

2012/2013

Uploaded on 01/29/2013

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Food Safety
Major force in restructuring food system:
Emphasis on traceability
Calls for Country of Origin Labeling
Recent concerns
Globalization and potentially weak standards—
e.g., with Chinese products
Bacterial contamination
Mad Cow Disease
Potential risks with GMOs?
Obesity
Food Safety
Types of Food Safety Problems
Options for Regulating Them
Implications of Food Safety Regulation for System
Structure and Performance
How Risky is Our Food?
Why Get the Government Involved?
Supply and Demand for Food Safety
Missing Markets?
How Do You Decide How Much to Invest in
Food Safety, How and Where?
Docsity.com
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Food Safety

„ Major force in restructuring food system:

  • Emphasis on traceability
  • Calls for Country of Origin Labeling

„ Recent concerns

  • Globalization and potentially weak standards—

e.g., with Chinese products

  • Bacterial contamination
  • Mad Cow Disease
  • Potential risks with GMOs?
  • Obesity

Food Safety

„ Types of Food Safety Problems

  • Options for Regulating Them
  • Implications of Food Safety Regulation for System

Structure and Performance

„ How Risky is Our Food?

„ Why Get the Government Involved?

  • Supply and Demand for Food Safety
  • Missing Markets?

„ How Do You Decide How Much to Invest in

Food Safety, How and Where?

Types of Food Safety Problems:

Each Regulated Differently

„ How Safe is Food to Produce?

„ Chronic Health Problems Due to Poor

Diet

„ “Contaminants” – The “classical” food

safety issue

Let the market take care of it….

9 Hayek argues that markets are extremely

efficient ways of organizing economic activity because they effectively synthesize lots of highly dispersed information regarding consumers’ desires and producers costs and express that information in prices.

9 Are Hayek’s arguments valid for dealing with food

safety issues like Mad Cow Disease and

potentially contaminated imports? Why or why

not? What alternatives do you suggest?

French Fries and Food Safety:

McDonald’s Obesity Suit

9 Does Society:

9 Provide public information about the relationship between high levels of fat consumption and disease? 9 Require labeling stating that high levels of consumption are hazardous to your health? 9 Regulate the level of fat allowed in french fries? 9 Tax calories?

Federally Informed Diets

9 U.S. key strategy has been information

provision or control

9 Consumer education

9 Content labeling

9 Warning labels

9 Advertising restrictions

9 Where is Joe Camel?

9 How much action is enough?

9 Will market forces contribute to good eating habits? Initiatives by fast food companies, insurance companies?

Types of Food Contaminants:

Chemicals

„ Intentional Poisoning – Bioterrorism

„ Allergens – e.g., introduced via bio-

engineering

„ Pesticides

„ Animal drugs

„ Environmental contaminants

„ Food Additives

Types of Food Contaminants:

Biological

„ Bacteria

„ Fungi

„ Viruses

„ Prions

„ Toxins

„ Parasites

Relative Risks

„ Microbial contamination

„ Toxic chemicals

„ Animal Drug Residues

„ Pesticides

„ Environmental contaminants

„ Biotech

„ Bio-terrorism

Increasing Uncertainty

Why Get Government Involved?

„ Will information (e.g., labeling), product

liability laws, and reputation solve the

problem?

„ Are there missing markets?

Determinants of the demand for

food safety

„ Income

„ Information/knowledge/perception

„ Other factors?

Supply of Food Safety

„ Perceived willingness to pay

„ Rise of certification programs

„ Problems of information asymmetry and

attribution

„ Who has incentive to fully reveal

information?

„ Problems of consumers capacity to

process information.

Profits for Innovators

„ Texas American , hamburger patty supplier

  • Switched from spot market to contract sales
  • Fewer product returns and customer complaints
  • Cheaper production costs
    • schedule workers and equipment use better
    • less product spoilage

„ Jack in the Box became channel captain for meat

industry on pathogen control

  • Avoided bankruptcy in 1993
  • Expanding stores, sales, and profits today

„www.ers.usda.gov/publications/aer831/

Roberts, ERS, 2004

Economics of New Tests

(Roberts and Unevher)

„ In 1990, limited information about pathogens in food

  • High cost, time to result, lack of specificity, etc.
  • Where do they enter food chain? Where do they

grow?

„ Source of market failure

  • Limited ability to monitor pathogens

„ New testing technologies available to reduce market failure Roberts, ERS, 2004

Supply of information

„ Advances in pathogen testing

  • Tests for more pathogens
  • Faster results - 1-2 days
  • Sensitivity– can detect low levels
  • Specificity– identify specific strain
  • Test for several pathogens with one sample
  • Fewer false positives/negatives
  • Quantify pathogens

„ Automated record keeping

and analysis

Roberts, ERS, 2004

Demand for Information

„ Increased value in last decade

  • New FSIS regulations (PR/HACCP)
    • Require Salmonella , generic E. coli tests
  • Increased risk aversion among buyers
    • More publicly available information
    • More outbreaks detected with FoodNet
    • Private contracts can require tests
  • Increased international trade of meat and poultry products

Roberts, ERS, 2004

Meeting Customer Needs: Creekstone

Farms’ Battle with USDA

„ Petitioned USDA to allow private testing for BSE (Feb 19, 2004) „ Market driven decision

  • Open Japan’s market (and others) to Creekstone product
  • Meet customer’s need by testing every animal
  • Kansas Secretary of Agriculture: Testing every animal adds value to their product…. should be able to employ appropriate marketing strategy is appropriate for them. (Kansas City Star, April 13, 2004)

„ USDA’s Answer: NO! (April 12, 2004)

  • USDA will continue to negotiate with the Japanese RE: U.S. beef exports
  • BSE testing of younger animals is not scientifically justified or necessary (have budged on this a bit).
  • “need sense of unity when addressing trading partner concerns“ „ Opponents: Costs of testing eventually passed to producers, up to $ per calf „ March 26, 2006: Creekstone lawsuit..”USDA overstepped its legal authority…acted as "a roadblock" to Creekstone's efforts to satisfy customer needs”

Food Safety and Market Failure

„ Food safety primarily a credence good

  • Cannot observe quality of good
  • not a search good (quality determined before

purchase)

  • only limited experience good

„ Main information problem

  • linking illness to food consumed

„ Now---Improved testing „ Drivers for private food safety innovations

„ New pathogen testing technologies

www.ers.usda.gov/publications/aer799/

How Do You Decide How Much to

Invest in Food Safety, How and

Where?

„ How to estimate costs and benefits?

  • USDA estimates costs at $6.8 billion/year for 5 major contaminants
  • Lost wages; valuing lost lives.
  • USDA cost calculator

„ Uncertainty

Useful Websites on Food Safety

ƒ http://www.ers.usda.gov/publications/aer

ƒ www.ers.usda.gov/Data/Foodborneillness

ƒ www.ers.usda.gov/Emphases/SafeFood

ƒ http://www.michigan.gov/mda/0,1607,7-125-

1568_21390-53829--,00.html

ƒ www.ers.usda.gov/Data/HACCPSurvey/

ƒ http://www.foodsafetynetwork.ca/

ƒ http://www.cdc.gov/foodnet/