Food Fearmongering Should Not Thwart US-UK Trade Deal
Let them eat chlorine-washed chicken.
About a decade ago, I flew to Oslo at the invitation of Norway's center-right party called Høyre. Back then, Høyre was in opposition, although today it forms a part of Norway's governing coalition. Its head, Erna Solberg, whom I met on the trip, is the country's prime minister. During my stay in the country I gave a couple of talks on trade protectionism, advising the Norwegians to keep the millions of krone they send to Africa as foreign aid (where it gets promptly stolen by local cleptocrats) and open their borders to African agricultural exports instead.
"Norway," some people objected, "has stringent food safety standards and Norwegians are used to high quality products." This, I pointed out, does not necessarily amount to much. At the time of my trip, the country was suffering from a domestic E. coli outbreak, and infections "have left several children with kidney failure." Moreover, like people elsewhere, many Norwegians shop with an eye on the price, not the national origin of the food they eat (i.e., irrespective of food safety standards). Thus, Norwegians shop in cheaper Sweden; Swedes shop in Denmark and Danes shop in Germany. In pursuit of a bargain, Germans do some of their shopping in Poland.
I thought of my Norwegian trip, because of a recent news item pertaining to Brexit and the United Kingdom's desire to secure free trade deals with other large economies prior to Britain's withdrawal from the European Union. One of the planned free trade deals includes—the horror of horrors—the United States. Europeans have been brainwashed about the supposed dangers of American food for decades. The EU, for example, bans the import of hormone-treated American beef as well as chlorine-washed chickens. American GMOs, especially, have been anathematized. It will come as no surprise that EU farmers, looking out for their own interests, are strong supporters of the bans.
Along with high import tariffs and import quotas, the EU's outright bans on foreign food items ensure that food prices in Europe are kept artificially high. "EU protectionism," a House of Lords study found earlier this year, "means that huge additional expense is imposed on consumers who might wish to buy products from outside the bloc: on dairy products tariffs are 54 per cent, on sugar 31 per cent and on cereals 22 per cent. It is not surprising that food prices in the EU are significantly higher than world food prices."
Indeed, one of the greatest attractions of Brexit is that the United Kingdom will, once again, be in charge of its own trade policy and able to eliminate bans, tariffs and quotas on agricultural imports, thus making food more affordable to those on the British Isles. Predictably, not everyone is on board with the trade liberalization agenda and British Secretary of State for International Trade Dr. Liam Fox is being raked over the coals for his willingness to allow American "chlorine-washed chicken… [to be] sold in Britain as part of a potential trade deal with the U.S. after Brexit."
Listening to some of the news coverage, you would have thought that American health and safety standards are non-existent, and Americans are being poisoned en masse by the unscrupulous U.S. food industry. Needless to say, chlorine-washed chicken is perfectly safe to eat, as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (that notorious tool of capitalism) reaffirmed just last year.
Why is this important? If the U.S.-U.K. trade negotiations stall because British food activists and protectionists refuse to recognize U.S. health and safety standards, one of the main benefits of Brexit—the lowering of British food prices—will be undermined. I have a better idea. Put a large sticker with the American flag on every U.S. chicken sold in the United Kingdom and let the British consumers decide if they are brave enough to buy it. If Norwegian consumers can devour a plate of Swedish meatballs at Ikea, British consumers can chow down an American chicken breast and save a few pennies to boot!
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Can you buy a banana in Norway? Coffee, tea, pineapples, chocolate, any of that dirty, nasty food from third-world equatorial regions?
Will a free trade agreement let us export food without importing European food hysteria? Certainly we would not want to import European food regulations.
Judging by other 'free trade deals' you won't have to worry about European food regulations. These agreements can run into the 1000s of pages and should mean plenty of new and exciting regulations.
Europe is notorious for food protectionism.
Of course, Mad Cow Disease devastated British beef herds in 1986-1998 and other parts of Europe.
I guess they won't dwell on that food quality.
Then there's all that "protected origin" crap. Like only the town of Cheddar can sell "cheddar". If they're smart they'll do away with that nonsense.
I rather like the idea of not being sold a product fraudulent marked "Cheddar" that really ain't.
Wait you mean the EU is protectionist, holding all member nations hostage for the benefit of a select few member nations? And to think, some British friends of mine are worried about the impact of Brexit on trade. Because, you know, the UK didn't trade prior to the formation of the EU.
Next you're going to tell me that the EU is really a money grab for poor nations like Greece at the expense of wealthier nations like Germany and the UK.
Clearly Brexit was really all about racism; the media told me so.
Well Germany looks at the EU doing what it couldn't do with War. Lets face it Europe does what Merkel and the Germans want. They achieved their goal of ruling Europe without a shot fired.
The German elites want Greece dependent upon them. Doesn't matter if it costs the German people.
> It is not surprising that food prices in the EU are significantly higher than world food prices."
References?
Whoa. I am again spending a summer in EU. This summer is Italy. Currently enjoying a month swimming the Adratic a Pescara. We mostly rent apartments in EU and self cater our vegetarian food and fish. Last summer we split between Italy and Costa del Sol. Fruit prices here are half or less than in N. California. All the fruit on offer here is ?0.95/kg or less. Since a kg is 2.2 lb and the exchange rate is around 1.2 $/? you can see that ?1/kg is close to $0.50/lb. So we are paying about half the price in the Bear Flag Republic. We do not eat red meat so I have no comparison between meat in EU and California. We buy peaches, nectarines, pears, apricots, cantaloupes, tomatoes, onions, carrots, summer squash, beet roots, and more. Red wine is about ?1/liter here, ?0.60/liter in Spain.
Maybe the high WW bread prices in USA are due to the agricultural subsidies?
I would actually pay much more for Mediterranean fruit than USA. Here the fruit tastes and smells wonderful.
Whoa!
What a load of signaling!
my Aunty Violet just got a new blue MINI Cooper Clubvan Wagon only from working part-time off a pc at home... see here now ????