FDA Commissioner: No One 'Envisioned' the Consequences of New Sesame Seed Labeling Rule
No one could have considered this possibility, except perhaps the many food-processing facilities that immediately did exactly that.

One of the better recent examples of how government officials do a poor job of anticipating the consequences of their actions occurred after the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) mandated warning labels for products containing sesame seeds.
The unexpected result: Suddenly everything seems to contain sesame.
In case you missed it at the time, here's what happened: In an attempt to aid those with allergies to sesame seeds, the FDA added the ingredient to a longstanding list of items—including eggs, milk, and shellfish—whose presence must be noted on the packaging of food products and at restaurants. In response, food producers started adding sesame to products that previously contained none.
The food producers were simply doing what made economic sense. The FDA's fines for not disclosing the inclusion of sesame are steep, and it's much cheaper to add a few seeds to everything than to face potential penalties for accidental mixing. "Rather than worry about how to prevent potential cross-contamination in products that don't contain sesame, some restaurants and food makers—including Olive Garden, Chick-fil-A, and Wendy's—are simply adding sesame to their products. That way they can list it as an ingredient and not worry about being faulted for accidental contamination," Reason's Elizabeth Nolan Brown wrote last year.
The result? Fewer sesame seed–free products are now available for people who are allergic.
But the cherry on top of this sundae of government failure—or perhaps the sesame seed atop the FDA's bun of bureaucratic bungling—was provided this week by none other than the agency's own chief.
"Some manufacturers are intentionally adding sesame to products that previously did not contain sesame and are labeling the products to indicate its presence," acknowledged FDA Commissioner Robert M. Califf in a statement. Califf went on to say that the FDA's goal, of course, was to help individuals with sesame allergies "feel more confident" about their choices.
"I don't think anyone envisioned there being a decrease in the availability of products that are safe choices for sesame-allergic consumers," he concluded.
Yes, no one could have possibly envisioned this outcome—except, perhaps, for the many food processing facilities that immediately responded to the FDA's new rules by doing exactly this.
What Califf means, of course, is that no one within the FDA considered this possibility. That's a telling statement. It indicates that the FDA likely didn't do a good job of investigating how the businesses affected by its rules would respond to the placement of sesame on the federal allergens list. It also suggests that the FDA's staff lacked the ability to see beyond the good intentions—helping allergy sufferers—of the policy to interrogate how such a rule might be implemented in the real world.
There is a recurring idea that advancements in technology and data processing can allow governments to solve the so-called knowledge problem—Friedrich A. Hayek's observation that central planning will always fail because government officials cannot aggregate all the necessary information to make better decisions than the decentralized ones made by individuals acting via markets.
But Califf's remarks show just how difficult solving that problem is. The FDA has virtually unlimited access to public health data and can easily acquire whatever information it might need to make any decision. And yet no one at the agency was able to predict how a regulation of a tiny seed would have huge unintended consequences.
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WARNING : Article may be cross contaminated with phobia or hysteria inducing legalese and statistical bafflegab
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Almost anything will "cause" cancer in lab animals if you feed them enough of it and wait long enough. Hence, everything is "known to California" as a cancer causing agent. Never mind that some of these have actually been proven NOT to cause cancer. The stupid law mandating this was actually a ballot initiative promoted by Tom Hayden, one of the few actual Marxists to have ever been elected to anything in my lifetime. It passed by a 5-3 margin, showing indeed that voters don't care about actual science. You now know why RFK Jr. has such a following.
No wonder Woodpecker stuffed Spotted Owl Terducken is the State Dish of Nevada.
The thing that always gets me is the very "Known by the State of California" label. What do Californians know that the rest of us don't?
Holy Fatal Conceit, Batman!
🙂
Real people "getting around" government dictates with "unanticipated responses" is not new or confined to food. How many spotted owls in old growth timber do you think succumbed to a quiet potshot (.22) then shovel and shut up once they became a burden on landowners? How many woodpeckers that were to be protected by forbidding the cutting of timber they occupy (of above a certain age) are "homeless" (and unable to nest/reproduce) because now owners of pine timber almost universally harvest (clear cut) their pines before that timber reaches the age the woodpeckers find attractive (and thus fall under harvest restrictions). How many acres in the west suddenly got put under the plow to prevent permanent restrictions on land use devolving from a desire to protect some kind of field rat, those acres never to be nested on by that field rat again?
Just remember, the dumb sumbitch on your front porch knocking on your door is from the government, and he's there to help you.
I get that government "minds" are instructed to stay very narrow, but is there any biologist/ecologist/orinthologist alive who would call it unlikely for any species of bird to nest in a "less desirable" tree if they happened to find themselves in an area where an "ideal" one couldn't be found?
I understand that trunk size/height are likely to be factors, and that outside of the Pacific Northwest, many species of evergreen trees don't grow particularly fast (part of why most "tree farming" happens in the PNW), but it's hard to imagine that an owl or woodpecker would just circle in the air eternally, or maybe just sit on the ground looking around waiting for the trees in a particular area to hit a certian age. At some point, they'd have to either move on to a different area, or "settle" for a less than ideal tree; and if they've been moving for a while, just give up the search and settle wherever they happen to tire out.
I think it’s quite possible that these small-brained birds will never nest anywhere else, because we already know of a similar case.
There are bird species that nest only in small holes in a short list of cliffs, and never anywhere else. Their numbers are limited by the numbers of nests in “the right address”. A male of that species proves its worth to the females by acquiring a nesting site in that limited area, and NO female will settle for a male who couldn’t fight for and win a piece of that choice real estate. Those particular cliffs have been proven to give the best chance for nestlings to survive, and selecting them has been encoded in the bird’s genes – and will probably long outlive the period when those cliffs are really the best spot.
I’m sure there are human females who similarly insist on a prestigious address on Manhattan Island, or no sex, and are likely to wind up childless, a single mother abandoned by an already married lover from the right address, married to an abusive narcissistic rich brat, or at best a trophy wife for a rich old man no worse than Donald Trump, until divorced for the newer model. But we humans have a much larger and more flexible mind, so most women are capable of taking other factors into account – and those who choose best will be evolution’s winners. (I think choosing best is the opposite of marrying to raise your kids in a penthouse. Say, marry a farmer without excess wealth and raise the kids to run freely outdoors, work for what they want, and be fully aware of Biology and the food chain supporting civilization.)
Women choose whom they will sleep with and whom they will reject. Some of them have lists of prerequisites that “eliminate” 90% of men from mating considerations. (Of course, if you are in the 10% it’s like being a kid in a candy store that features “free milk”).
But men choose whom they will marry the occasional Capt. Savahoe excepted. Throw up too many pre-conditions or have an N-number in triple digits and the man will decide it’s just not worth the trouble and the potential future financial and family risk is just too high, and decide “to go his own way”, which in fact appears to be what is happening now. He will then have time to work on improving himself to join the “select 10”.
Of course, the government can provide for those little bastards whose mama found a willing (or suitably drunk) sperm donor and then squeezed another another one. Wait – they’re already doing that, aren’t they? How’s that working out for your society?
You really don't know a lot about wildlife, do you?
It’s not like there’s precedent with labeling rules for peanuts resulting in the ubiquitous “Processed in a facility that also processes nuts” warning.
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The simple answer would be: no, regulators do not think about the unintended consequences of their actions. They think that businesse will do exactly as the regulation is intended to work instead of following the path of least resistance and potential costs. The tend to think that their diktats are easier to implement than they actually are. They are not necessarily deliberately malicious, more lacking in sense and foresight.
It's called "hubris".
Those whom the Gods would destroy they first feed chickpeas and tahini.
So why is there still a Middle East?
😉
"more lacking in sense and foresight." And the capacity to learn from experience, such as Sarcasmic pointed out about the peanut warnings.
But they are TOP MEN.
""I don't think anyone envisioned there being a decrease in the availability of products that are safe choices for sesame-allergic consumers," he concluded."
Translation:
"I don't think anyone gave a damn about there being a decrease in the availability of products that are safe choices for sesame-allergic consumers," he concluded.
I can genuinely believe they never considered that businesses would find other ways to comply with the rule other than as they intended, They are not that bright.
"They are not that bright."
I think many of them are plenty bright. It's just that they look at things from a different perspective.
The people who create and impose rules are looking from a "If the rules don't say it's ok then you can't do it" point of view. The "Who said you could do that" attitude.
As opposed to a "If the rules don't say I can't then it's ok" point of view. The "Fuck you it's a free country" attitude.
Sadly the latter is slowly becoming extinct.
They are not that bright BECAUSE they look at things from an ABSURD perspective. They think everyone will MINDLESSLY do their bidding.
Considering the time and expense involved in adhering to the spirit of the law, these regulators might realize they're essentially saying "I'll bet you a billion dollars you can't figure out a weaselly way to get around this regulation." The sesame seed problem was a beginner-level puzzle.
There is a recurring idea that advancements in technology and data processing can allow governments to solve the so-called knowledge problem—Friedrich A. Hayek’s observation that central planning will always fail because government officials cannot aggregate all the necessary information to make better decisions than the decentralized ones made by individuals acting via markets.
But Califf’s remarks show just how difficult solving that problem is.
This understates the challenge posed by the knowledge problem. It isn’t that you’d need really good computers. It’s that you’d have to be a mind reader. The problem isn’t that you don’t have the data, it’s that you have no meaningful way, absent prices or mindreading, of measuring the data in the first place. This isn’t that. It’s more a simple case of regulatory stupidity and hubris. They assumed because they wanted rules to have certain effects, the universe would bend to their intentions.
I hate giving Sarcasmic credit, but he correctly pointed out that there should be no knowledge problem here. This is the same phenomenon as the 'ubiquitous “Processed in a facility that also processes nuts” warning.' Anyone with an IQ above room temperature could have predicted that a sesame seed warning would also become ubiquitous and nearly meaningless, to the detriment of those with allergies - if they cared about the result.
The bigger problem than the knowledge problem is that regulators have no skin in the game and don't really care.
> No One 'Envisioned' the Consequences of New Sesame Seed Labeling Rule
There are always unintended consequences. But there are rarely unforeseen consequences.
Stuff like this happens because of the bureaucratic hubris, the delusion that a group of people can effectively plan and control a complicated system. That they don't think the system is complicated (the market) is proof of their idiocy. Sesames sounds simple, but sesames are part of a complex system known as "the market for food". Make it more difficult to use sesames and the market will react. The exact reaction may not be foreseen, but that the market would react is a guaranteed certainty.
"The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design." -- Friedrich Hayek.
The not so unforeseen consequences are rarely unintended. Just because they deny they were intended doesn't mean they were not actually the goal.
People routinely ask the wrong questions and solve the wrong problems.
This is one of those things.
“Politics is the art of looking for trouble, finding it whether it exists or not, diagnosing it incorrectly, and applying the wrong remedy.”
― Ernest Benn
I was in an "Everything is a $1.25" store a while back. Literally every shelf had a "California Prop 65" warning sign. Obviously some manager just got tired of the bullshit and declared everything in the store hazardous.
Have you seen the list of chemicals that CA considers "carcinogens"?
With the requirement under Prop 65 that the warning be applied to anything that could involve any designated substance (or contact with one of those substances) during manufacture, processing, or use the number of hypothetical objects which wouldn't require a warning might actually be quantifiable in a practical way. Most retail stores (also banks, restaurants, gas stations, and every other kind of commercial or professional business operation) just put a catch-all warning at the entry rather than label 99.3% of all objects inside their building.
At the very minimum, anything made from/using wood, plastic, or metal of almost any sort requires a warning. Nearly all upholstered interior furniture requires a warning because the flame retardant treatments required by State regulations are on the carcinogens list; the shelves in that store probably merit a warning even if there's no inventory on them. Car exhaust and most automotive fluids are on the list, so any covered parking area requires a warning. Caffiene is on the list, but got downgraded to a "class B carcinogen", which might allow for coffee, tea, and most carbonated soft drinks to be served without a warning (every place that sells/serves those things has a warning on their entry door though, so they're covered just in case) unless they happen to include any no-calorie sweetener other than maybe stevia.
The only way to potentially exist in CA while avoiding any and all products which would require a cancer risk warning under Prop 65 would be to wander naked on the beach (not one near a city, where people bring all manner of cloth, metal, and plastic to the area), while maintaining some minimum distance from the ocean because of the multitude of chemicals (and in recent years used hypodermic needles) which wash down the storm drains and "rivers" in and around L.A. and S.F. Im not sure that there's any potential way to get food and drinking water while completely avoiding any compound that's been determined to merit a warning label though.
"Have you seen the list of chemicals that CA considers “carcinogens”?..."
Quite a few fasteners in an on-line industrial supply outfit are so listed; the materials in the platings and/or finishes are on 'the list'.
Because it’s so effective, most sugar beets are now genetically modified. That has spilled over to a large swath of food products carrying the genetically modified label.
If I were a big company like Frito Lay, I would just put the warning on every single product that they make saying “this product MAY contain bioengineered ingredients”
I'd heard from an old friend whose grandparents used to operate a sugar beet farm in eastern MT that the subsidies on corn and the resulting inexpensive competition from HFCS and "regular" corn syrup had put most sugar beet farming out of business, or at least made it untenable to run a smaller operation.
The vast majority of that corn is also GMO strains though, so in terms of "modified" labeling, that's probably a difference without a distinction.
Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?
Yeah, like Prohibition resulting in now 5 generations of kids thinking it's hip, chic, and sexy to be a Goddamn gangster? Who'd a thunk it?
"Sounds like a great idea, with the best of intentions. What could possibly go wrong?"
Gavin Newsom, Feb. 2020, minutes before announcing he's gonna knee-cap the CA economy and make gov't education even worse than it already was.
Can't they invoke the ADA and make McDonalds sell a sesame seedless, sesame seed bun Big Mac?
What? Vat-grown sesame (at least according to some here?)
“Franken-sesame” according to the Anti-GMO freaks?
Artificial sesame made from maggots from the WEFers and Kolonel Klink Klaus?
What next, Sesame seed-stuffed turducken?
🙂 😉
"Central planning will always fail because government officials cannot aggregate all the necessary information to make better decisions than the decentralized ones made by individuals acting via markets."
Also, central planning will always fail because officials are generally less competent than individuals acting via markets. And also much more likely to be corrupted by bribes and influenced by political and social biases. The list goes on, but it's pointless to continue.
Shockingly enough, it was actually Congress, not the FDA, who defined sesame as a major food allergen. How much of this was the FDA just doing what they had to do in light of that legislative change?
So much for the Supreme Court reliance on Congress’ constitutional legislative role and the presumption of competence and Congressional intent in the lawmaking process. Between passing unconstitutionally vague and broad laws that should be automatically struck down by the Supreme Court; and passing micromanagement-style regulatory laws not designated to Congress by the Constitution, that should be automatically struck down by the Supreme Court; we end with thousands of “unintended consequences” a day. It is impossible to calculate the detrimental impact of Congressional idiocy on all of our lives – literally!
I'm not quite sure what you mean by that. Do you think food labeling in general for food that is sold interstate isn't a proper Commerce Clause power? I would argue that it is.
Or are you saying that somehow the regulations are properly left to the executive branch and not Congress? If so, you're just wrong.
"...Do you think food labeling in general for food that is sold interstate isn’t a proper Commerce Clause power? I would argue that it is..."
Are you familiar with the term "statist", statist?
To avoid lawsuits over sesame seeds, just label everything as containing sesame seeds. In our litigious society, how could you have NOT seen that coming?
Everybody loves a story of administrative incompetence, but I think this one is off base. The FDA was responding to an explicit direction from Congress to add sesame to the "major food allergen" (21 USC §321(qq) as a result of the FASTER Act of 2021. FASTER was meant to stand for the Food Allergy Safety, Treatment, Education and Research Act, but it really says how quickly this directive passed thru Congress. It was a bi-partisan bill in the Senate that was approved by unanimous consent the same day. It passed the House six weeks later on a 415-11 vote and signed by Pres. Biden 2 weeks after that. The FDA had no discretion that I can see. The fault here, if any, lies with Congress.
ANYONE claiming "no one could anticipate" the consequences of a regulation is either a liar, incompetent to regulate anything, or both.