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Dr Muriel Newman
Contact Muriel:
Email: muriel@nzcpr.com
Phone 09 4343 836
or 021 800 111
PO Box 984, Whangarei
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29
January 2012
Does
our food industry need new regulation?
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The
Department of Trade and Industry describes the food and
beverage industry as the “lynchpin of New Zealand's
prosperity”. Representing a half of all New Zealand's
merchandise exports by value, the industry has a “crucial
influence on our economy”.
In his first major speech of 2012, Prime Minister John Key
also highlighted the importance of food production to our
national wellbeing: “Looking
ahead, I am very confident about New Zealand's prospects.
There are huge opportunities out there for New Zealand. We are
a food-producing country in a world that is demanding more
high-quality food. A growing middle class in China, India and
across Asia is tuning in to the goods and services New Zealand
can supply.”
With that in mind, the total revamp of the food industry that
will take place under the government’s proposed new Food
Bill, is an important issue for the country. This is
legislation that was instigated in 2003 by a Labour government
that was obsessed about regulating food, having poured
hundreds of millions of dollars into a wide range of
initiatives from policing school tuckshops to fast-tracking
obesity reduction measures. However, given the country’s
dismal experience of two other sweeping reforms that were
prepared by former Labour governments to be passed by National
(namely the hugely problematic Child Support Act and the
Resource Management Act) additional care is surely called for
regarding the Food Bill.
The food industry, which consists of 35,000 food businesses
along with 200,000 part-time food traders, provides 1 in 5 New
Zealand jobs. It is one of our most innovative sectors, which
the growing popularity of Farmers Markets demonstrates, with
their promise of fresh foodstuffs direct from grower to
consumer. Successful entrepreneurs who produce world class
foods and beverages - like Charlie’s Orange Juice or
Lisa’s Hummus - often start in a family kitchen.
The Food Bill has been sitting on Parliament’s Order Paper
since 2010 when it was reported back with unanimous
cross-party support from a Select Committee, having attracted
only 66 submissions.[1] As it stands, the Bill would introduce
a new regulatory regime for food makers and suppliers by
requiring businesses to tailor their food safety procedures to
the level of risk they manage. The intention is to reduce the
incidence of foodborne disease and further align our food
safety requirements with those of our trading partners.
Under the Bill, high risk businesses such as restaurants or
baby food manufacturers would be required to operate under a
regulated “food control plan”, whereas businesses in the
medium risk category such as bakeries or pre-packaged food
manufacturers would be regulated under “national
programmes”. Low risk businesses, such as those running
roadside stalls, selling their own home-grown produce at
markets, or operating charity sausage sizzles, would simply
receive free information on “food handler guidance”
describing how to ensure their produce is safe for consumers.
Householders growing their own produce or swapping with others
would not be affected.
According to the Bill’s Regulatory Impact Statement the
economic cost to New Zealand from foodborne illness in 2009
was estimated to be $86 million per year.[2] However, a new
study prepared for the New Zealand Food Safety Authority has
nearly doubled this estimate to
$162 million![3] On closer examination, the 2010, which
provides an analysis of the total economic cost to the country
of six foodborne illnesses - Campylobacteriosis,
Salmonellosis, Norovirus, Yersiniosis, STEC and Listeriosis - shows the breakdown of the $162 million as
follows:
·
Cost of treatment - $6 million
- $5 m cost of hospitalisation, lab
tests and allied care
- $1 m in GP costs
·
Cost of food industry regulation and
supervision - $17 m
·
Cost of business compliance - $12 m
·
Loss of work output due to illness - $27
m
·
Residual private cost - $100 m
In
other words, out of the so-called $162 million cost of
foodborne illness, that is being used to justify a massive
re-regulation of the food industry, only $6 million is the
direct cost of health care. The rest is made up of the cost of
setting and complying with food hygiene standards, workforce
losses caused when people are ill, with the lion’s share of
the cost nothing more than a guestimate of the value private
individuals place on not getting sick! Put simply, the $162
million cost to justify the Bill is a gross exaggeration of
what most people understand to be the real ‘cost’ of
illness.
In 2006, as a result of the rising rate of campylobacter food
poisoning - which peaked at almost 16,000 notified cases -
various sectors of the food industry entered into voluntary
food control arrangements aimed at reducing the incidence of
infection through high risk foods like chicken. This new
methodology is largely responsible for having halved the
incidence of campylobacter since 2006. With such voluntary
arrangements showing the way, many in the food industry are
now asking whether there really is a problem that needs to be
solved through a massive re-regulation of the industry - or
whether the necessary improvement could be achieved through
minor tweaking of problem areas.
A question that springs to mind is how much food poisoning
occurs as a result of poor food handling practices in the
home, but recent figures are hard to come by. A report that
covered the period from 1998 to 2001 found that 34 percent of
food poisoning outbreaks originated in hotels, restaurants or
other eating establishments, 32 percent in private homes, 9
percent in workplaces, schools or kindergartens, 6 percent in
hospitals or residential institutions, 2 percent from
retailers, 1 percent from caterers, none from food
manufacturers, and 16 percent were either unknown or from
other sources.[4] A 2010 study, which looked at the commercial
origins of foodborne illness outbreaks, found almost 90
percent came from restaurants, cafes and takeaways, with less
than 10 percent from caterers, supermarkets, and other food
outlets. In other words, the way we handle food in our homes
remains a crucial matter when it comes to the incidence of
foodborne illness.[5]
This
week’s Guest Commentator is Dr Eric Crampton, a Senior
Lecturer in Economics at the University of Canterbury, who has
also been looking into aspects of the Food Bill. He worries
that the cost burden associated with the new Bill will become
a disincentive to entrepreneurship: “Perhaps
worse than my potential loss of choice as a consumer is the
loss of an easy pathway to small-scale entrepreneurship. Even
if the monetary costs of registration as a food producer are
low, Wellington often weighs too lightly the discrete hurdle
thrown in front of a potential entrepreneur who has never
otherwise had to worry about compliance regimes. The dread
costs of figuring out which forms to fill out, and the fear of
getting something wrong, can be very real barriers to would-be
new small-scale entrepreneurs. When you’re really not sure
if you’ll be able to make a go of a new venture, adding a
hurdle of having to seek permission can provide a burden much
larger than the nominal $50 registration fee.” To read
Eric’s article, click here
>>>
In
their submission to the Bill, Horticulture New Zealand
explained how in spite of giving assurances that existing
industry food safety programmes would be recognised, the
government has failed to do so requiring instead some 7,000
growers in a low risk industry - who have never needed to be
registered before since they operate under an industry
protocol - to register and be subjected to almost $8,000 in
compliance costs.[6]
In
her submission, pensioner Biddy Fraser-Davies, who makes
cheese from her three cows (Sally, Emily and Molly) and has a
turnover of under $20,000, explains how she only had to pay
$100 to her local council for food safety compliance to set up
eight years ago, but compliance costs would increase to nearly
$5500. She told how her application to make a new ‘raw’
hard cheese had been sitting with the regulators for over two
years and that indications were of compliance costs in excess
of $600 for each ‘batch’. She explained, “My
‘batch’, typically is a single wheel of cheese around 3 or
4 kilos! Even my most dedicated customer will baulk at this
price being added to the cost of the cheese”.[7]
Lisa
Er, founder of Lisa's Hummus, believes that if the food bill
had been around 15 years ago, the compliance costs would have
prevented her from getting off the ground: “I had absolutely
no money, nothing to invest at all. I had been on a benefit so
I was starting from the ground up. Lisa's now has 123
employees, so that's made a difference to the country, but I
couldn't even have started because I had no money
whatsoever.”[8]
For a government that claims to be committed to encouraging
wealth creation and reducing compliance costs on small
business, the Food Bill could be a major step backwards. It
appears to be being driven more by bureaucratic considerations
rather than by the need to encourage entrepreneurship in the
food sector - within the bounds of clear food safety
imperatives. It is also not clear what the answer is to a
fundamental question that should be asked of all new
legislation: Is there a
problem to be fixed and if so will this Bill fix it?
In
light of the concerns that are now being raised about the
Bill, surely the best course of action would be for the
Minister to re-open submissions to let a new Committee of
Parliament re-examine the issue. If more food sector operators
were encouraged to share their views, they may identify better
ways of dealing with problem areas that would not involve the
total re-regulation of the whole food industry. This could
lead to safer food, less disruption and lower costs – a
win/win all around. If this were the case, the Bill could be
withdrawn.
That is essentially the
message that the New Zealand Food and Grocery Council gave to
the government in their submission – I will leave the last
words to them: “As far as FGC can tell the
current regime is adequate. There has not been widespread
concern with the safety or suitability of food that is
manufactured in New Zealand. In fact, New Zealand has a highly
regarded worldwide reputation for producing high quality safe
food. This is all achieved under a system that is largely self
regulatory.
Food manufacturers in New Zealand understand the importance of
providing safe and suitable products and in a small market
like New Zealand where there are only two major supermarket
retailers, reputation and branding image are vitally
important.”[9]
The FGC acknowledges that there are concerns - such as small
pockets of unacceptably high levels of campylobacter - but
they believe the New Zealand Food Safety Authority could deal
with these through education and by enforcing current
regulation: “In our view, if the current system of
regulation is not broken there is no need to try to fix it.
This is certainly the case if the fix will cost manufacturers
and consumers more. We urge the Committee to consider whether
there is actually a need to introduce more regulation in this
area and if it is not justified to either leave things as they
are or make minor changes where needed.”
This week’s poll asks:
Do
you see a need for further regulation in the food industry? Click here for poll >>>
FOOTNOTES:
1.
Food
Bill
2.
Regulatory
Impact Statement 2009
3. Applied Economics, Estimating
the Economic Cost of Foodborne Illness in NZ
4.WHO, The
present state of foodborne disease in OECD countries
5. Environmental Science and Research, Foodborne
disease in New Zealand 2010
6. Submission
Horticuture NZ
7. Submission
Biddy Fraser-Davies
8.3 News, New
law worries small-time food outlets
9. Submission
Food and Grocery Council
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