Can't Find Baby Formula? Blame Tariffs and the FDA.
This crisis is the result of protectionism, regulation, and central planning.
HD DownloadPresident Joe Biden has invoked the Defense Production Act and ordered the U.S. military to fly pallets of baby formula into the country from Europe.
But if the federal government just backed off and let the market function like it's supposed to, we wouldn't need military intervention or emergency policies designed for war to stock grocery store shelves with baby formula. This crisis is largely the result of protectionism, regulation, and central planning of the sort that both Democrats and Republicans want more of in Washington.
Reporters like CNN's Jake Tapper have been pressing officials to explain why the government didn't respond more quickly to this shortage—but the actual solution is for the government to be less involved entirely.
A better question is why didn't the Biden administration clear the way for the private sector to react to price signals, like it does in every other industry? Food suppliers would have started stockpiling European-made formulas months ago if only U.S. tariffs and regulations weren't an obstacle.
So how does this work in practice? First, the federal government prohibits importing many European-made baby formulas simply because they fail to meet the Food and Drug Administration's (FDA) labeling requirements.
But Europe is the world's leading exporter of baby formula, thanks to major producers based in Germany, the Netherlands, and Britain. If the FDA's labeling regulations are so necessary, why is it that infants all over the globe safely consume formula made in Europe? Meanwhile, about 98 percent of the formula sold in the U.S. is produced domestically. We've sealed ourselves off from a robust, and safe, global market.
In addition to the labeling requirements, the government imposes huge tariffs on foreign-made formula to protect domestic manufacturers and the American dairy industry.
Now the U.S. is heroically flying in European-made baby formula. But just a year ago, customs officials were bragging about heroically seizing it at a port of entry.
These two policies of regulation and protectionism work in tandem to scare aware foreign suppliers. For example, let's say you're running a baby formula manufacturing firm in Germany. You would have zero incentive to spend the money to earn FDA approval for your labels because high tariffs would make your product too expensive to compete in the U.S. market.
Brian Deese, director of the National Economic Council, says the White House has acted quickly to "waive a whole bunch of regulations that traditionally make sense, but don't make sense in this crisis."
"Don't make sense in this crisis?" Wait a minute. Did European-made baby formula suddenly become less hazardous? Does passing formula through the hands of the U.S. military magically makes it safe for American babies to drink? Or maybe the regulations and tariffs are designed to protect big businesses, not babies, and never should have existed in the first place?
Sen. Mike Lee (R–Utah) introduced a bill that would temporarily waive the tariffs on baby formula and remove the FDA labeling regulations.
How about scrapping them altogether?
There's an important lesson here for economic nationalists, who claim that international trade is a vulnerability. Excluding even more foreign-made products is "critical for our national security," Sen. Josh Hawley (R–Mo.) argued in a New York Times op-ed last year. He has suggested tightening the "Made in America" rules that already govern federal procurement to include "the entire commercial market."
If Hawley got his way, all industries could become just as vulnerable to supply shocks as baby formula. Will we one day have to replace our $2.5 trillion international shipping and logistics industry with emergency military aircraft crisscrossing the skies?
The Biden administration and Congress get to come off like heroes, rushing to feed American babies left to go hungry because of the supposed cruelty of the free market. But that's all an act. Don't be fooled about the real cause of this shortage.
Written and narrated by Eric Boehm. Edited by Regan Taylor. Audio by Ian Keyser.
Photo Credits: A1C ALEXCIA GIVENS/UPI/Newscom; Abaca Press/Gripas Yuri/Abaca/Sipa USA/Newscom; Amy Katz/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; Bill Clark/Newscom
BSIP/Newscom; Chamtrumping, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; CHINE NOUVELLE/SIPA/Newscom; IChris Kleponis / CNP / SplashNews/Newscom; Imagine China/Newscom; James 4, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons; John Nacion/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Mark Hertzberg/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; Michael Brochstein/Sipa USA/Newscom; Niyi Fote/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; Paul Weaver/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom; RICHARD B. LEVINE/Newscom; Rod Lamkey - CNP/Newscom; Ron Sachs / CNP / SplashNews/Newscom; Stanislav Krasilnikov/ZUMA Press/Newscom; Stephanie Tacy/SIPA USA/Newscom; Stephen Shaver/Polaris/Newscom; Sipa USA/Newscom; Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call/Newscom; US Air Force/ZUMAPRESS/Newscom
Music Credits: "Game Over," by 2050 via Artlist; "High On You Instrumental Version," by Fvmeless via Artlist.
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
It's not like the regulatory agencies get captured by the industries.
Also blame Boehm.
what administration shut down the Abbott plant?
What a stupid video. Don't these idiots know that self sufficiency is the road to prosperity? If we imported baby formula then we'd be vulnerable to the whims of foreigners. That's why everything important should be produced domestically. Lower tariffs? Ease import restrictions? What a bunch of bull. Especially when you apply that same logic to steel, lumber, and anything made in China.
But... but... but... tariffs are sacred! Our Orange Savior said so!
Blockades harm other countries when we do it to them, but blockades lead to prosperity when we do it to ourselves!
No Communist baby forumula from China! It will make them grow up to be Democrats! Aaargh!
Stuff your TDS up your ass, shit-pile.
No Communist baby forumula from China! It will make them grow up
to be Democrats!poisoned. Aaargh!Get off mommy's computer before you get in trouble.
Unless I missed it, Trump wasn't mentioned in this article. Seriously dude, get some help for your TDS.
I see the TDS-addled asshole brandyshit is not capable of responding to those who point out that brandyshit is still trying, by whatever means, to direct attention away from brandyshit's TDS and perhaps excuse his idiocy.
Stuff it up your ass, brandyshit; no one is buying it. Eat shit and die.
How can tariffs effect a product not allowed by the FDA to be imported?
Parents are more than willing to pay the increased costs right now, supply doesn't exist.
Honest question: are parents even allowed to pay higher costs being that one of government's favorite pastimes is to not allow the price system to work?
You seem to be denying price systems just in this thread. Parents would begrudgingly pay more in the current markets. They can't because of The FDA.
It isnt currently a pricing issue. It is a regulatory issue.
If this was an article about inflation or costs, tariffs would be in play. It is not. It is a regulatory issue currently.
Reason is just shoe horning in their pet issues around a crisis.
Also, how does this affect sex workers getting abortions?
Kochbux don't flow from articles advocating medical *freedom*.
Ever seen Reason actually be libertarian and come out against prescription drug laws?
Me neither.
Kochbux flow when you bitch about tariffs.
Hence a medical freedom issue is contorted and tortured into a tariffs article.
Reason is a toilet.
How can tariffs effect a product not allowed by the FDA to be imported?
That was explained in the video. European producers have no incentive to comply with FDA labeling requirements when hefty tariffs price their products out of the market.
No, it was lie about in the video dumbass. European formula doesn't meet current import regulations. Full stop. It is those regulations stopping importation, not the tariffs.
If the regulation didn't exist, they would be importing.
Why should European producers comply with FDA labeling requirements when protective tariffs make their products to expensive to compete with what is made domestically?
*too* expensive
Are you this dumb? Even of tariffs went to zero they would have to comply woth the regulations. They would endure a cost for those changes. It would still cost them the same with or without the tariffs.
Right now customers would pay the higher prices with tariffs, but they still aren't complying with the regulation. They still aren't importing. Due to the cost to change to meet the regulations.
It isnt the tariffs stopping them.
See the increased costs of eggs due to California REGULATIONS.
It is a regulatory issue.
I know you feel the need to defend tariffs at all costs, but you're wrong here.
Let's say they comply with the FDA labeling requirements. The tariffs still exist. Now they've got formula on the shelf here in the US, but because protective tariffs make it significantly more expensive than domestically made formula, it doesn't sell.
So where is the incentive to comply?
When a product is scarce, people will pay a higher price for it. The regulations prevent the product from being available at any price.
And when the product is no longer scarce, the imported stuff won't sell.
The regulation that's stopping the importation of European baby formula is all about labeling. Stupid shit like the order things are listed in on the nutrition label.
Why go to the cost of producing US specific labels in the face of import tariffs?
Tariffs have a sales cost to consumer, not a production cost to the manufacturer.
The labeling costs exist with or without tariffs.
Right now the market would pay higher costs for formula. The current market would absorb the cost. And since half of all formula is provided by WIC it would mostly be felt from federal budgets, not consumer budgets.
Again, this is a regulatory issue, not a tarrif based one.
Right now the market would pay higher costs for formula.
Yes. Right now. But what about when domestic production ramps back up? Then their product won't sell.
Again, where is the incentive to comply?
Profits?
If they could make a profit don't you think they'd have done it already?
Can’t make a profit on something you aren’t allowed to sell.
Sure they're allowed to sell it. All they have to do is comply with FDA labeling requirements. If they could make a profit then they would have done that already. So what's stopping them? Oh yeah, protective tariffs.
He’s stuck in tariffs. He is literaly unable to consider additional variables
"He’s stuck in tariffs. He is literaly unable to consider additional variables"
Pretty sure the asshole's stuck in the infantile obsession known as TDS.
Right now the market would pay higher costs for formula.
https://reason.com/video/2022/06/03/cant-find-baby-formula-blame-tariffs-and-the-fda/?comments=true#comment-9526195
For how long? A month? It would probably take longer than that to get the FDA's blessing. By then it would be a waste of time and money because, thanks to protective tariffs, nobody will buy the expensive stuff.
Why are you so compelled to defend tariffs?
This seems like a chicken or the egg question. So, let's end the debate and get rid of both the stupid regulations and the tariffs. Boom, problem solved.
(Out of curiosity what are the regulations requiring exactly?)
The EU requires things listed in a different order on the Nutrition label than the FDA requires.
Tariffs raise the cost of goods making them less competitive and reducing sales vs how they would do sans tariffs. In short, they reduce the profitability of exporting goods to the US.
I mean....
The FDA says it will permit agents to apply discretion if a foreign manufacturer does not list its baby formula ingredients in the exact order prescribed by FDA regulations, for example.
https://fortune.com/2022/05/17/us-infant-baby-formula-shortage-imports-fda-nutrition-tariffs-usmca/
The tariffs are a secondary issue for when supply meets demand if reducing prospective suppliers.
When demand outstrips supply tariffs have only monetary cost effects.
Absolutely nothing in this stupid thread (the replies) takes in how the regulations not only affect imports, but somehow have prevented any and all domestic competitors to the Abbott plant.
If we had more than one manufacturer, Abbott closing wouldn’t be having such a devastating effect.
Yet another issue that separates actual Libertarians from GOP LARP'ers.
How exactly is an import tax blocking supply?
Blame Biden he is the President. The Democrats blamed Trump for covid. Seems fair.
We do know tariffs are not an embargo, right?
We do know that tariffs don’t prevent trade, they increase the cost of the traded item, right? Inflationary prices could partly be blamed on tariffs… however, a total lack of supply screams other issues.
Regulatory overreach, monopoly, and FDA seem like pretty solid candidates. If it’s true there are tariffs on formula, there should have been an increase in stateside competition unless regulations and FDA stymied competition for the sole (!) US manufacturer of baby formula.
"...Regulatory overreach, monopoly, and FDA seem like pretty solid candidates. If it’s true there are tariffs on formula, there should have been an increase in stateside competition unless regulations and FDA stymied competition for the sole (!) US manufacturer of baby formula."
All of the above, plus, likely, some "unintended consequences" of some other government actions.
It's sorta like trying to analyze why planned economies don't work; they don't. Want thousands of empty containers where they're not needed and a traffic-jam of ships off long beach? Let Newsom run the economy for a couple of years.
How did he screw that up? Who knows and who cares? He certainly doesn't.
Tariffs did not shut down the Michigan baby formula plant.
"The closure of the Abbott Nutrition facility in Michigan has had a devastating impact on the supply of baby formula across the U.S."
The Facts:
The closure of the Abbott facility in Sturgis, Michigan, was one of the most significant factors precipitating in the shortages of baby formula supply in the U.S.
The factory closed in February after the FDA issued a warning to consumers not to use certain powdered infant formula produced at the Michigan plant. - newsweek.com/fact-check
Yet Reason again decides to hammer on tariffs.