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1

Centre for Food Policy

2

Food Systems: Food Policy and Governance perspectives

GECAFS Food Systems workshop

21-22 October 2004

Medical Research Council, London

David Barling

Centre for Food Policy

School of Allied Health Sciences

City University

3

Some key themes

• The food system is increasingly complex

• Witnessed a food revolution in last century

• Changing patterns of governance

• Major policy challenges

• Focus esp. on near consumption end

4

20th century food revolution

• new products, processes & intensification• new distribution & logistics • Transformation of ‘nature’: rise of genetics• impact on health, environment and culture• pressure on control systems, rise of supply

chain management• Primacy of marketing, brands, price

5

Key change factors are…

• Market globalisation: penetration of new food markets

• Technological change in work and leisure

• Urbanization and rising incomes

• Cuts in real food price

• Shopping opportunities - from small stores to supermarkets

6

Key change factors (cont.)…

• Concentration, i.e. emergence of national, regional and global giants

• Integrated management control systems

• Global sourcing (now + rhetoric of localism)

• Marketing: systematic moulding of and response to consumer consciousness

• Pursuit of brand value

7

… this has shifted power

• from State to Corporation: emergence of dual regulatory structures (State/Corp’n)

• from Farm to Retail + Trade:

• from National to Regional/global: e.g. rise of WTO + Codex/ EFSA

• from Citizenship to Consumerism

8

Current State policy focus is on safety…when it ought to be on the (social) features of food policy…• Health: nutrition & degenerative disease

• Environment: causes of pollution, lifestyle, energy use, resource depletion (e.g. water and biodiversity)

• Consumerism: price and cost internalisation

• Culture: people skills

9

Challenges

Look at 2 key challenges to the food system with focus on the consumption end:

1. Market power and corporate concentration

2. Nutrition and health

Could add 3. externalities & 4. waste

10

Challenge 1: Market Power and corporate concentration

Look at concentration along the food chain especially near consumption end

11

European Grocery Turnover

66.948.931.9

189.4

93.7

58.748.5

260.9

131.1

78

72.7

387.8

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

billio

ns

2000 2005 2010

Largest 2nd Largest 3rd Largest Next 7 Largest

• Source: IGD Research, 2001• Published in: European Grocery Retailing… now and in the future…, Press Release, February 26th 2001, IGD

12

IGD European Retail Index (ERI)Retailer Rank

(ERI)Rank

(Turnover)European Total

Grocery Market ShareEuropean Status

Carrefour 1 1 7.2% Leading pan-EuropeanMetro 2 2 1.9% RetailersAuchan 3 5 2.9% Major European RetailersAldi 4 7 2.9% (not yet pan-European)Lidl & Schwartz 5 14 1.7%Ahold 6 10 2.4%Tesco 7 6 3.3%Rewe 8 4 2.3%ITM 9 3 2.9%Casino 10 15 1.7%Tengelmann 11 12 1.3%Wal-Mart 12 13 1.9%

Total 32.4%• Source: IGD Research; Market shares - IGD Research & estimates/M&M Eurodata; published in: European Grocery Retailing… now and in the future…, February,

2001, IGD

13

0

20,000

40,000

60,000

80,000

100,000

120,000

140,000

160,000

180,000

200,000

World's Top 20 Grocery Retailers,by Turnover (2000)

• Source: IGD (2002), Global Retailing• Letchmore Health: Institute of Grocery Retailing, pg 113

14

17

48

0

42

83

0

19

33

1113

19

36 37

2

16

49

39

30

24

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

90

% F

ore

ign

Sa

les

World's Top 20 Grocery Retailers,by Foreign Sales (2000)

• Source: IGD (2002), Global Retailing; Letchmore Health: Institute of Grocery Retailing, pg 113

15source: J Grievink Cap Gemini / OECD 2003

16

Top 10 global food processors, 2001, $bnTop 10 global food processors, 2001, $bn

7.0

9.0

9.9

10.6

12.2

12.8

19.0

30.5

35.1

41.8

0 10 20 30 40 50

Kellogg

Heinz

Danone

Sara Lee

PepsiCo

General Mills

ConAgra

Unilever

Kraft

Nestlé

In 2001 General Mills bought Pillsbury from

Diageo

Source - Company Annual Reports, 2000

$Bn

17

Growth of McDonalds' Total System-wide Restaurants and Total System-wide Sales, 1991-2001

0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

2001 2000 199919981997199619951994199319921991

$-

$5,000

$10,000

$15,000

$20,000

$25,000

$30,000

$35,000

$40,000

$45,000

mill

ion

US$

Total Systemwide restaurants

Total Systemwide sales

18

Yum! International Sales in International Restaurants, 2001 (KFC, Pizza Hut,Taco Bell)

source: company website 2002

Americas21%

Greater China11%

Asia Pacific43%

Europe - South Africa25%

19

World’s top 7 agrochemical companies 2001 source: Agrow 2002

 

Rank Co. AgChem Sales $m

1 Syngenta 5,3852 Aventis 3,8423 Monsanto 3,7554 BASF 3,1055 Dow 2,6126 Bayer 2,4187 DuPont 1,917

20

Challenge 2: Nutrition and Health

• Nutrition Transition: dietary change health impact

• Health policy: degenerative diseases deserve higher priority than safety

21

Major dietary changes: the nutrition transition

• Rise of meat, sugar, refined foods

• Drop in fibre, & often in fruit & veg

• Change in tastes

• Change in production and food systems

22

Injuries (9.1%)

Noncommunicableconditions (59.0%)

Communicable diseases,

maternal and perinatal

conditions and nutritional deficiencies

(31.9%)

Total deaths: 55,694,000

Source: WHO, World Health Report 2001

Death, by broad cause group 2000

23

49%

27%

9%

15%

22% 43%

14%

21%

Global burden of disease 1990 - 2020by disease group in developing

countries

Communicable diseases, maternal and perinatalconditions andnutritional deficiencies

Noncommunicable conditions

Neuropsychiatric disorders

Injuries

1990 2020 (baseline scenario)

Source: WHO, Evidence, Information and Policy, 2000

24

Deaths, by broad cause group and WHO Region, 2000

InjuriesNoncommunicableconditions

Communicable diseases, maternal and perinatal conditions and nutritional deficiencies

AFR EMR EURSEAR WPR AMR

25

50

75%

So

urc

e:

WH

O,

Wo

rld H

ea

lth R

ep

ort

20

01

25

0

50,000

100,000

150,000

200,000

2000 2020 2000 2020

India SSA

Double burden of disease in Double burden of disease in middle/low income countriesmiddle/low income countries

DALYs

Communicable, maternal/perinatal cond.,nutr. deficienciesNoncommunicable Conditions

Source: WHO/EIP Global Burden of Disease

29

Diet and risk of NCD• Up to 80 % of cases of CHD and up to 90 % of

type 2 diabetes could be avoided through changing lifestyle factors.

• About one third of cancers could be prevented by eating healthily, maintaining normal weight and being physically active throughout the life span.

30

What institutional response?…emergence of multi-level

governance • Global

• Regional

• National

• Sub-national

• Local

31

Governance: Public & Private

• Dual system : Public and Private• Private sector leads in some cases• Public leads in others: reacts to crises?• Hybrid – e.g. post Curry Commission on

Future of Food and Farming – new supply chain management (role of the Food Chain Centre & Farm Assured Standards)

32

Food policy lacks integration

Polices are divided across:

• Health

• Food safety

• Agriculture

• Trade

• Competition

• etc

33

More integrated approaches exist

• WHO European Region (51 member states):

First Action Plan for Food & Nutrition Action Plan 2000-20005

• WHO Global Strategy on Diet, Physical Activity and Health (2004)

• Lacking policy authority - left to member state action

34

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Nu

trit

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35

Conclusions

• Complex changes result in policy challenges and huge costs

• Selective presentation to focus on near consumption perspectives

• Global environmental changes further complicate these challenges (&costs)

• Ask are OUR food systems’ typologies robust enough to address these changes?