The Sun (San Bernardino)

‘Fixes’ for baby formula shortage are thin gruel

- Steven Greenhut Columnist Steven Greenhut is Western region director for the R Street Institute and a member of the Southern California News Group editorial board. Write to him at sgreenhut@rstreet. org.

SACRAMENTO » In the midst of a nationwide baby formula shortage, the president has announced seemingly dramatic solutions. Joe Biden on Wednesday invoked the Defense Production Act, a Korean War-era emergency measure that gives the president the authority to force private companies to produce goods and services to support defense efforts.

That’s an unusual use of federal wartime powers given the United States is not currently at war — well, beyond our usual support for simmering not-quite wars in the Middle East and elsewhere. The formula shortages are understand­ably frightenin­g for young mothers, but they in fact have nothing to do with the nation’s defense.

Biden also launched “Operation Fly Formula,” which as the name suggests directs the U.S. military to use its planes to fly formula from other countries to the United States. Once overseas formula lands on U.S. soil, the federal Food and Drug Administra­tion has actually agreed to loosen its binders of rules regarding formula content, labeling and sale.

The agency will “consider whether to exercise enforcemen­t discretion and the extent of that enforcemen­t discretion…. For example, an infant formula whose label does not list the nutrients in the order required ... would need an exercise of enforcemen­t discretion regarding that particular labeling requiremen­t, and FDA may determine that enforcemen­t discretion is appropriat­e.”

So, if enough American babies are hungry, FDA bureaucrat­s might — at their sole discretion, of course — let Canadian and German formula makers sell their products to Americans even if they label the ingredient­s out of the proper order. It’s progress, anyway.

Baby formula has become scarce after an Abbott Nutrition facility in Michigan closed following a bacterial contaminat­ion that resulted in a recall of its powdered product. The feds essentiall­y forced the plant to shut down after they found traces of bacteria at the plant following four illnesses among infants (two of whom died).

That’s a serious concern, but as the AP reported, “it’s not certain the bacteria came from the plant; strains found at the plant didn’t match the two available samples from the babies.” Such bacteria can come from a variety of places — homes and not just factories. Furthermor­e, AP added that bacteria traces were “not in areas used to make the powder.”

We’ll see how the investigat­ion plays out, and whether a federal re-opening agreement with the company will finally get the supply chain moving again. Meanwhile, Democrats, such as Rep. Rose DeLauro of Connecticu­t, are milking the situation politicall­y by demanding additional funding for FDA inspectors and other industry regulation­s. DeLauro has been blasting the manufactur­ers.

Such political posturing won’t fix the supply situation and likely will make it harder for companies to ramp up operations to fill the void. Policymake­rs should be encouragin­g production rather than attacking it. They should reform the notoriousl­y bureaucrat­ic FDA, which has long delayed the release of life-saving drugs and other necessary products.

“The U.S. produces 98 percent of the baby formula American parents buy,” a CNBC report explained. “Four manufactur­ers — Abbott, Mead Johnson Nutrition, Nestle USA and Perrigo — dominate the market. When one plant goes offline, the supply chain is easily disrupted.” That’s true, but the network doesn’t explain why Americans are so dependent on four companies.

How about this? Thanks to union-friendly Democrats and “Buy American” Republican­s, our nation imposes a crazy patchwork of tariffs and trade rules that limit the availabili­ty of formula from other countries, including those with state-of-the-art manufactur­ing standards.

The Cato Institute’s Gabriella Beaumont-Smith notes that the United States imposes tariffs up to 17.5% (plus additional duties) on overseas formula manufactur­ers — something that keeps non-American companies from competing in our market. The administra­tion is suddenly eager to airlift the once-verboten foreign products.

There’s another way government created this shortage. Many formula buyers are lowincome women who receive subsidies via the Women, Infants and Children program. “In 1989, Congress, hoping to keep WIC’s costs down, passed legislatio­n requiring states to use competitiv­e bidding to select one manufactur­er of infant formula to be covered by WIC,” Time’s Abby Vesoulis explained. Markets are amazing. Through Scottish economist Adam Smith’s “invisible hand,” supply and demand stay in equilibriu­m thanks to a spontaneou­s system of pricing and incentives. This happens without central direction. Indeed, economies where “experts” direct economic decisions are mainly known for bread lines and famines (not to mention gulags).

Government­s can’t plan economies, but can disrupt them. They can impose many regulatory barriers that limit firms’ ability to respond quickly to changing market conditions. Those rules destroy a market’s resilience, which is what’s happening with baby formula. It’s also what’s happened with supply chains after government­s derailed the economy over COVID.

When you hear politician­s promising to solve this formula crisis with military aircraft, chalk it up to the usual political “Pablum.” It’s a term that now means “bland or insipid intellectu­al fare” and ironically was inspired by tasteless, processed baby cereal.

 ?? ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Shelves typically stocked with baby formula sit mostly empty at a store in San Antonio, May 10, 2022.
ERIC GAY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Shelves typically stocked with baby formula sit mostly empty at a store in San Antonio, May 10, 2022.
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