May 21, 2007: Op-Ed Columnist
Fear of Eating
By
PAUL KRUGMAN
Yesterday I did something risky: I ate a salad.
These are anxious days at the lunch table. For all you know, there may be E.
coli on your spinach, salmonella in your peanut butter and melamine in your
pet’s food and, because it was in the feed, in your chicken sandwich.
Who’s responsible for the new fear of eating? Some blame globalization; some
blame food-producing corporations; some blame the Bush administration. But I
blame Milton Friedman.
Now, those who blame globalization do have a point. U.S. officials can’t inspect
overseas food-processing plants without the permission of foreign governments —
and since the Food and Drug Administration has limited funds and manpower, it
can inspect only a small percentage of imports. This leaves American consumers
effectively dependent on the quality of foreign food-safety enforcement. And
that’s not a healthy place to be, especially when it comes to imports from
China, where the state of food safety is roughly what it was in this country
before the Progressive movement.
The Washington Post, reviewing F.D.A. documents, found that last month the
agency detained shipments from China that included dried apples treated with
carcinogenic chemicals and seafood “coated with putrefying bacteria.” You can be
sure that a lot of similarly unsafe and disgusting food ends up in American
stomachs.
Those who blame corporations also have a point. In 2005, the F.D.A. suspected
that peanut butter produced by ConAgra, which sells the product under multiple
brand names, might be contaminated with salmonella. According to The New York
Times, “when agency inspectors went to the plant that made the peanut butter,
the company acknowledged it had destroyed some product but declined to say why,”
and refused to let the inspectors examine its records without a written
authorization.
According to the company, the agency never followed through. This brings us to
our third villain, the Bush administration.
Without question, America’s food safety system has degenerated over the past six
years. We don’t know how many times concerns raised by F.D.A. employees were
ignored or soft-pedaled by their superiors. What we do know is that since 2001
the F.D.A. has introduced no significant new food safety regulations except
those mandated by Congress.
This isn’t simply a matter of caving in to industry pressure. The Bush
administration won’t issue food safety regulations even when the private sector
wants them. The president of the United Fresh Produce Association says that the
industry’s problems “can’t be solved without strong mandatory federal
regulations”: without such regulations, scrupulous growers and processors risk
being undercut by competitors more willing to cut corners on food safety. Yet
the administration refuses to do more than issue nonbinding guidelines.
Why would the administration refuse to regulate an industry that actually wants
to be regulated? Officials may fear that they would create a precedent for
public-interest regulation of other industries. But they are also influenced by
an ideology that says business should never be regulated, no matter what.
The economic case for having the government enforce rules on food safety seems
overwhelming. Consumers have no way of knowing whether the food they eat is
contaminated, and in this case what you don’t know can hurt or even kill you.
But there are some people who refuse to accept that case, because it’s
ideologically inconvenient.
That’s why I blame the food safety crisis on Milton Friedman, who called for the
abolition of both the food and the drug sides of the F.D.A. What would protect
the public from dangerous or ineffective drugs? “It’s in the self-interest of
pharmaceutical companies not to have these bad things,” he insisted in a 1999
interview. He would presumably have applied the same logic to food safety (as he
did to airline safety): regardless of circumstances, you can always trust the
private sector to police itself.
O.K., I’m not saying that Mr. Friedman directly caused tainted spinach and
poisonous peanut butter. But he did help to make our food less safe, by
legitimizing what the historian Rick Perlstein calls “E. coli conservatives”:
ideologues who won’t accept even the most compelling case for government
regulation.
Earlier this month the administration named, you guessed it, a “food safety
czar.” But the food safety crisis isn’t caused by the arrangement of the boxes
on the organization chart. It’s caused by the dominance within our government of
a literally sickening ideology.