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I still don't understand how a label causes a rise in prices. ...
Government Regulation is never free, my friend.
I still don't understand how a label causes a rise in prices. Certainly, it's not related to actual costs related to the designing the label. Why shouldn't the customers know whatever they want to related to the product they're about to buy unless its a trade secret." Australia and New Zealand have GMO labelling and have had it for many years. Food costs more in both nations versus what we pay in North America." EDIT.Actually, according to this site,http://www.numbeo.com/cost-of-living/compare_countries_result.jsp?country1=United+States&country2=New+Zealand food prices a lower in New Zealand than in the US. 1.65% lower.In Australia food prices are only 1.14% higher.Just because food costs are higher in New Zealand and Aus. doesn't mean that this is because of GMO labeling.Has this been proven? I suspect that the prices would be higher there regardless of GMO label requirements. IMO the supposed cost increases because of a label is a red herring. The GMO industry is constantly trying to corner the market in food production and this red herring argument is just another arrow in the quiver. The problem is that when you get excessive concentration in one industry prices will eventually rise. Also anti competitive market sectors lead, like in nature, towards less diversity, creativity and innovation.
The label is a one-time cost. That has to be paid by someone as well, but it's impact can be amortized over all production, so in the end it's impact is minimal.With any new labelling requirement, however, somebody has to create and audit a paper trail for all ingredients. Generally when it comes to manufactured food (maybe you buy canned soup, or frozen pizza) the grower creates the documentation (expense to the farmer, GMO or non-GMO), the manufacturer compiles and audits that documentation with every shipment of raw ingredients and with every change in grower, and then provides that information to the consumer via labelling.This is an ongoing expense. This becomes a bigger issue for small food manufacturers than large ones, but regardless, it costs money that has to be recovered from somewhere.For a real-world example, we can look at the issue of Country-Of-Origin regulations for meat products, which was for the last few years the law in the US. The cost of tracking and auditing the data required to meet the obligation was so high, all US meat packing plants simply stopped buying any beef or pork that was not born, raised and finished in the USA. During the time the regulations were in place, the cost to the consumer of meat products in the US rose measurably and persistently.Any Canadian will have multiple US TV stations in their cable, Satellite or DSL TV package. I have television feeds from stations in Boston, New York (Rochester and NYC), Atlanta, Seattle, Los Angeles. I see the local supermarket ads. Trust me, a steak in my local grocery store is a few dollars a pound cheaper than any of these other cities, and it was not difficult to see the prices rise over the last few years.We are talking real money out of real consumer pockets in a well documented real instance of a labelling requirement increasing the cost of food production, and note that this is a relatively simple amount of information to track compared to, say, a frozen pizza with dozens of ingredients.With regard to comparing the cost of food in New Zealand or Australia and the US, food cost is higher in the US than Canada as well, and that despite Canadian costs having risen since the collapse of the price of oil (because that affects the value of he Canadian currency, which increases the cost of imported foods. Canada must import most fresh fruit and vegetables during winter months).Neither has GMO labelling at present, but my point is there are many factors that enter into overall food costs. Pretending that a mandatory regulatory obligation costs nothing isn't a reasonable position to hold, I'm afraid. I am willing to go so far as to maintain that should you ask any businessman or corporation, the need to meet regulatory obligations is their biggest annoyance and in every example results in increased cost of doing business.Adding a unique labelling component must result in an increase in costs that has to be borne by someone. I think I know who that someone usually is.A genuine increase in the cost of doing business in an assessment of the costs of doing business is not and cannot be, by definition, a "red herring".As I've posted here before, I don't care whether there is a GMO labelling requirement or not. Although this is framed mainly as an issue facing consumers in, say, Maine, there are plenty of people here in Canada who are chomping at the bit to generate a similar requirement here. But I an not going to stand up and argue that it cannot result in some increase in my food costs. That is an untenable position to hold.
Actually, a new label is probably just a few clicks away and is easily added to the production line. It would be no different than if they were to change the appearance of a current label which is done on many brands regularly . Just like potato chips, cereal, bread...whatever. What big companies don't like is bad PR. IMO Monsanto, et al should just agree to the GMO label because by fighting it they lose because of the negative publicity which will affect their bottom line more than any label. Therefore no impact on prices to the consumer.
Gluten free foods - are they healthy or a fraud?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BxV3Fu7kBg4
" ... Lakes and rivers are continually hammered by farming chemicals. That is obvious and well known. ..."Certainly there are issues with runoff. You mention Lake Winnipeg ... Manitoba (and many other states / provinces) have problems with large-scale Hog Farms ... practically the definition of "factory farm" ... and the runoff from these operations is a serious problem. Just an example. But it's not a GMO example..
Huge Wake Up Call for Monsanto in Europe as Glyphosate Approval Hits Serious Roadblockshttp://www.march-against-monsanto.com/3322-2/Russia has totally banned GMO's. Severely punished if this law is broken.Processed junk will go higher, real food will probably go lower, law of supply and demand. More people are waking up and planting their own gardens. Our local farmers are always cheaper than the local stores.
When I found out that Monsanto made Agent Orange, vaults for my coffin and controls the food supply, I decided I shouldn't believe a word they say.Doc
{snip}But what bugs me is they started using Glysophate with GMOs back in the 90s.