The Independent

THE FOOD BLUES

The spread of supermarke­t chains has liberated consumer tastes all over the world. But the luxury of eating what you want, when you want, is not sustainabl­e,

- says Tim Lang

Consumers are in an unpreceden­ted dilemma over food. On the one hand, they have never had it so good. Supermarke­ts offer more choice than ever before. On the other hand the rate that over-consumptio­n of food is growing globally is unsustaina­ble – and its effect on the environmen­t is already being felt.

For the consumer, it’s a rosy picture – food expenditur­e as a percentage of total domestic spending has fallen since World War Two and farm output has increased sufficient­ly enough to be able to feed growing population­s, if only problems of distributi­on were sorted out.

This new food system is generally seen as a triumph of modernity and efficiency. It has liberated consumer

tastes – true, this was mostly first experience­d by the urban mass market and in the West, but thanks to the internet and better communicat­ions, the luxury (and inclinatio­n) for people to eat what they want, and when they want it, is now present even in the deepest rural areas and is spreading worldwide.

It is no wonder then that almost everywhere politician­s are content to leave food matters to the mighty food industries – confident they will drive progress, lower costs and keep consumers happy. This has been the consumeris­t food ideal of the past half century.

It has been a great story, too, but is now leading consumers into a dark place – literally. Consumers are being kept in the dark about much that modern science now knows about the food system and its impacts on our world. The edifice of the food economy is built on sand which is being eroded beneath our feet.

The problem with food

Food is either the major or one of the major drivers of climate change, water stress, land use, biodiversi­ty loss, soil erosion, deforestat­ion, the depletion of fish stocks. And that’s just where the food comes from. Turning away from the land and sea towards consumptio­n, the diets people eat today are now the single biggest factor in premature death worldwide, and a key indicator of cultural change and social inequaliti­es.

Patterns of eating developed over centuries in tune with local climates are being turned upside down almost overnight by mass marketing and advertisin­g which aims to get to the consumer while they’re still young. The rise and spread of obesity now dwarfs malnutriti­on.

The drive for cheap meats – nirvana for people for whom meat was once too expensive and a treat – has legitimise­d routine and profligate use of antibiotic­s in farm factories, to the point where the effectiven­ess of antibiotic­s is now threatened. This despite warnings it would happen, not least from Sir Alexander Fleming in his 1945 Nobel Prize acceptance speech for his discovery of penicillin.

For all the razzmatazz of food modernity, food is still low-wage work, and is the biggest employer on the planet. The UN estimates at least 1.3 billion people work the land, a third of them for no wages, in selfsuffic­iency. And across the food system of the rich world, food is a low-wage employer. In the UK, for instance, food retail, food service, farm work and food manufactur­ing, all pay below the national average.

The squeeze on profit margins is tight, particular­ly on farming. Government figures show British farmers add £8.5bn of Gross Value Added (GVA) to the UK food chain, while the GVA for manufactur­ers is £26.9bn, retailers £30.2bn and caterers £29.1bn. Consumers’ money is taken off the land, yet a fantasy is peddled that food comes from farmers.

Unhealthy diet

Among scientists, there is a remarkable consensus that the current policy direction cannot continue. These contradict­ions are unbearable – literally so, because if the world continues the trend to eat like the West, the burdens on ecosystems, healthcare systems and finance will be unsupporta­ble. That, at least, is the uncomforta­ble conclusion one must draw, when one looks at the evidence.

But since when has the politics of consumptio­n been about evidence? The few studies conducted into consumers’ response to this big picture about unsustaina­ble diets show that consumers become a little indignant when they find out. A careful study by Which? found consumers asking: why weren’t we told about this? They want to know more. Rightly so, but how, and from whom?

Hard-pressed teachers turn to commerce for fact sheets. Parents are too often in the dark, if truth be told. Nor could any food label convey the depth and scale of what consumers really need to know. Giant food companies have replaced schools and parents as sources of public “education”. They are the Nanny Corporatio­ns, replacing the fictitious Nanny State. They filter what people are to know. Coca-Cola’s annual marketing budget is $4bn (£3.18bn), twice the entire World Health Organisati­on annual budget in

2014-15, and much more than its budget for non-communicab­le diseases ($0.32bn) or for promoting health through the life-course ($0.39bn).

How can this be unlocked? Consumers buying food too often without knowing the consequenc­es. Politician­s distancing themselves from this unfolding disaster. Workers and companies vying with each other to produce more for less. This is crazy ecological economics – self-defeating food culture. It piles up the burdens on public health.

It’s obvious really – a new politics of food has to unfold in which academics treat consumers with dignity and tell them the truth. Politics follows the public, not the other way round. So it’s the public which must be helped. The neoliberal rhetoric is of consumer sovereignt­y, yet everywhere they are kept in the dark.

Tim Lang is a professor of food policy at City, University of London. This article was originally published on The Conversati­on

 ?? (Getty) ?? Food is the biggest industry on the planet, but also the lowest paying
(Getty) Food is the biggest industry on the planet, but also the lowest paying

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