Exposé
From a Food Policy Insider
book review by Jeff Nelson
Food
Politics:
How the Food Industry Influences Nutrition and Health
by Marion Nestle, Ph.D., M.P.H.
469 pages, University of California Press,
March, 2002
Marion
Nestle’s “Food Politics” is not like “Fast Food Nation,”
or John Robbins’ books such as his recent “The Food Revolution,”
or Frances Moore Lappe’s works including her “Hope’s Edge.”
Unlike these books, “Food Politics” doesn’t take a strong
ethical or emotional stance on food issues.
What
it does do is quietly and systematically, with the careful
scholarship of a master academician, show how the U.S.
food industry works relentlessly to get you to eat more.
And how very often it is the worst foods, the least healthy
foods, the foods lowest in essential nutrients and highest
in fat and sugar, that get promoted the most.
Nestle
is an insider, part of the establishment. She managed
the editorial production of the first, and as yet the
only, Surgeon General’s Report on Nutrition and Health.
She says that on her first day on the job, “I was given
the rules: No matter what the research indicated, the
report could not recommend ‘eat less meat’ (because) the
producers of foods that might be affected by such advice
would complain to their beneficiaries in Congress, and
the report would never be published.”
No
subsequent report has appeared, even though Congress passed
a law in 1990 requiring that one be issued every two years.
Why? The answer, according to Nestle, is food politics.
She points out that “saturated fat and transsaturated
fat raise risks for heart disease, and the principal sources
of such fats in American diets are meat, dairy, cooking
fats, and fried, fast, and processed foods.” Any advice
of federal policies that sought to decrease consumption
of these foods would cause the sellers of these foods
“to complain to their friends in Congress.”
One
of the strengths of “Food Politics” is Nestle’s description
of the deliberate use of young children as sales targets.
Children are eating too much of the wrong kinds of foods.
Obesity rates are skyrocketing. And the food industry
is spending billions to keep kids hooked on junk foods.
In 1997, U.S. children obtained no less than 50% of their
calories from added fat and sugar.
Nestle
points out that soft drink companies unapologetically
name 8- to 12-year-olds as marketing targets. McDonald’s
produces commercials, advertisements and a Web site aimed
specifically at children 8 to 13. Quaker Oats happily
spends $15 million to promote sales of its heavily sugared
Cap’n Crunch cereal to children. “Teletubbies,” the public
television program for toddlers, was first sponsored by
Burger King and later by McDonald’s. Meanwhile, only 1%
of U.S. children regularly eat diets that even resemble
the recommended proportions of the food pyramid.
In
1987, researchers counted 225 commercials on major television
network channels during Saturday morning hours. In 1992,
the number had increased to 433. By 1994, the number had
grown to 997.
And
these ever-increasing ads are hardly for healthy foods.
The vast majority are for hamburgers, candy bars, fast
food, soft drinks, cookies, chips and heavily sugared
breakfast cereals. Researchers could not find a single
commercial for fruits, vegetables or whole wheat bread.
Meanwhile,
schools are being converted into vehicles for selling
foods high in calories but low in nutritional value. One
of the most deplorable examples is “pouring rights”—large
payments from soft-drink companies to school districts
in return for the exclusive right to sell that company’s
products in every one of the district’s schools.
Soft-drink
companies have for years sold their products on school
and college campuses through vending machines. But “pouring
rights” represent a major step forward in the campaign
to encourage kids to drink more, much more. From 1985
to 1997, Nestle points out, school districts increased
their purchases of soft drinks by a staggering 1,100%.
The
marketing strategy is effective. The softdrink companies
make large lump-sum payments to school districts and additional
payments for five to 10 years. In return, the companies
get more than exclusive rights to sell their products
in school vending machines and at all school events. They
get to turn schools into advertising vehicles for their
products. The agreements, says Nestle, “result in constant
advertising through display of company logos on vending
machines, cups, sportswear, brochures and school buildings.
In this manner, all students in the school, even those
too young or too difficult to reach by conventional advertising
methods, receive constant exposure to the logos and products.
The use of a single brand is designed to create loyalty
among young people who have a lifetime of soft drink purchases
ahead of them.”
Soft-drink
companies are putting vending machines into schools with
younger and younger children, and they are putting larger
and larger bottles in the machines. By 2001, softdrink
companies were routinely placing 20- ounce bottles in
school vending machines. In addition, says Nestle, they
are vended in portable screw-top plastic bottles that
permit sipping throughout the day rather than downing
in one gulp. This last feature particularly distresses
dental groups alarmed about how the sugar and acid in
soft drinks so easily dissolve tooth enamel.
How
do the companies justify their practices? A spokesman
for Coca-Cola argues that his company “makes no nutritional
claims for soft drinks” but they can be part of a balanced
diet. Our strategy is we want to put soft drinks within
arm’s reach of desire, and schools are one channel we
want to make them available in.” As far as government
efforts to restrict such marketing practices, “We question
whether there is a need for ‘Big Brother’ in the form
of USDA injecting itself into decisions when it comes
to refreshment choices.”
“Food
Politics” is a scholarly work. Reading it, you don’t often
get a feel for Nestle’s own personal beliefs. She doesn’t
discuss her own diet. She’s not a muckracker. She is an
honest, sincere and knowledgeable person working to change
the system from the inside. “Food Politics” is an academically
scrupulous account of how the food industry in the United
States controls government nutrition policies. It’s important
and eye-opening reading for anyone looking to make intelligent
and informed food choices.
Marion
Nestle has been professor and chair of the department
of nutrition and food studies at New York University since
fall 1988. Her degrees include a PhD in molecular biology
and an MPH in public health nutrition, both from the University
of California at Berkeley. Visit her site: FoodPolitics.com