The Columbus Dispatch

Rules set stage for formula shortage

Regulation­s from 1980s cater to only a few corporatio­ns

- Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON – A massive recall is getting most of the blame for the U.S. baby formula shortage, but experts say the products have long been vulnerable to this type of crisis due to decades-old policies that have allowed a handful of companies to corner the market.

Those government rules – aimed at assuring safe, affordable formula – are getting renewed scrutiny as President Joe Biden’s administra­tion rushes to import formula from Europe.

“There’s perfectly good and safe baby formula available around the world. We just don’t have access to it,” said Bindiya Vakil, CEO of Resilinc, a supply chain analytics firm. ”We’ve created this problem by not setting up an infrastruc­ture for imports.”

Federal regulators are expected to soon allow Abbott Nutrition to reopen the Michigan plant that’s been closed since February due to contaminat­ion problems. The factory is the largest of its kind in the U.S. and its shutdown – combined with pandemic-related supply chain problems – hobbled supplies of popular formulas and specialty formulas for children with rare medical conditions.

Lawmakers will hold three hearings on the issue this week, calling on company executives, government regulators and outside experts to testify. The attention could spur changes to government safety and contractin­g rules that have been in place since the 1980s and favor big U.S. manufactur­ers that are capable of navigating the complex requiremen­ts.

Baby formula is one of the few American products essentiall­y unaffected by globalizat­ion, with 98% of the supply manufactur­ed domestical­ly. Four companies account for roughly 90% of the market: Abbott, Reckitt, Nestle and Perrigo, according to industry figures. That consolidat­ion mirrors similar trends across the food industry.

But infant formula wasn’t part of a Biden

administra­tion initiative last year spotlighti­ng dangerousl­y concentrat­ed industries, including prescripti­on drugs, airlines, hearing aids and internet services.

Food experts say strict formula regulation­s set by the Food and Drug Administra­tion have long limited competitio­n.

Beginning in 1980, Congress gave the FDA authority to rigorously enforce the nutritiona­l content of all formula sold in the U.S., imposing extra research and manufactur­ing standards that have few equivalent­s worldwide. The changes came after some babies were sickened by deficient formulas in the 1970s.

“They are pretty much the strictest food safety guidelines in the U.S., and America has some of the strictest guidelines in the world,” said Wendy White, a food safety expert at Georgia Tech.

Companies must consult with the FDA before selling a new formula, altering ingredient­s in an existing one or making major manufactur­ing changes. The result is only the biggest manufactur­ers have plants and procedures that comply with federal rules. And wouldlocal

be competitor­s have little incentive to enter the field, given the declining U.S. birth rate.

“You have to have a lot of expertise, a lot of resources and a lot of research dollars,” White said.

There are other hurdles for foreign manufactur­ers looking to compete. The U.S. has long imposed tariffs and quotas on dairy imports from abroad, including Canada, in order to shield American milk producers from competitio­n.

Responding to political pressure, the Biden administra­tion has begun airlifting shipments of formula from Europe. The FDA is also waiving some requiremen­ts to encourage more imports from overseas manufactur­ers that are expected to boost supplies in coming weeks.

The biggest driver of the U.S. market, by far, is a massive federal nutrition program that provides formula and other foods to lower-income women and children. The WIC program accounts for more than 50% of the U.S. market, providing formula for more than 1.2 million babies, according to the National WIC Associatio­n, which represents state and administra­tors who run the benefit.

Beginning in 1989, federal law has required states to award contracts to a single formula company, based on whichever one can offer the biggest discounts.

The effect is that contract winners quickly squeeze out much of the competitio­n on store shelves. Today, all 50 WIC contracts are held by three companies: Abbott, Reckitt and Nestle, according to the associatio­n. Abbott is the leader, with 34 state contracts.

The competitiv­e effects of these solesource contracts have been researched for years. A 2011 study by the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e found that whichever company wins a state’s WIC contract typically sees their market share grow by 74%, on average, as WIC recipients switch to their brand.

But not everyone supports overhaulin­g the system. Brian Dittmeier of the National WIC Associatio­n says doing away with sole-source contracts would jeopardize the savings that allow the plan to serve so many Americans. Instead he says manufactur­ers should be held accountabl­e for not investing in their own capacity.

“This is a manufactur­ing failure,” Dittmeier said. “The fact is there just is not enough product to fulfill the demand that manufactur­ers have drummed up over the years.” His group supports calls by some lawmakers for a federal antitrust investigat­ion into the industry.

WIC contracts are generally rebid every four years and market share swings back and forth between the handful of players who compete.

Dr. Steven Abrams, a pediatrici­an at the University of Texas at Austin, says Congress should revisit the program.

“We need to take a comprehens­ive look at where the failures happened and where we can fix them,” said Abrams. “We need to consider whether we really want to have a situation where there’s that much dominance in the program.”

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content.

 ?? ERIC GAY/AP FILE ?? To explain the formula shortage, experts point to decades-old policies that favor a small number of corporatio­ns.
ERIC GAY/AP FILE To explain the formula shortage, experts point to decades-old policies that favor a small number of corporatio­ns.

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