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Salt
sellers
Doctors
and nutritionists have long known that too much salt is bad for you
as, by raising blood pressure, it increases the risk of strokes and
heart attacks. So, it would seem only normal that a body bearing the
name “Food Standards Agency”
should concern itself with the amount of salt that food companies put
into the foodstuffs they offer for sale.
But
the Food Standards Agency has to operate within the context of a
capitalist economy where all businesses, including food companies,
aim to make the biggest profits possible on behalf of their
shareholders. As a result it has to be careful not to try to set “unrealistic”
standards, i.e. standards that would reduce profitability.
In
2005 the FSA put out a consultative document with proposals to
achieve a 40 percent reduction in people’s
average salt intake by 2010. The food industry was appalled and
immediately began lobbying to have the proposals watered down.
Salt
has been used to preserve food since the dawn of civilisation and
before. It also adds a distinctive flavour to food. The food industry
was quick to seize on this in their counter-arguments. Reducing the
salt content of their products, they said, would increase the risk of
food poisoning (as if, these days, there weren’t
alternatives to salt as a food preservative). It would, they went on,
make their products less tasty to consumers, whose interests of
course they put above all else, etc, etc.
Times
journalist Dominic Kennedy used the Freedom of Information Act to
gain access to the documents submitted to the FSA by the food
industry. What even he called “the most
nakedly honest” argument came from
Nestlé
who submitted that:
“Salt
is a major constituent in many products –
and it is a cheap ingredient. Reduction in salt levels, even by a
very small amount, significantly increases the overall cost of
manufacturing the product, mainly because the ingredients used for
the replacement of salt are much more expensive, e.g., herbs or meat
extracts” (Times, 3 August. See
also timesonline.co.uk/britain, search for “pro-salt
campaign”).
In
the end the FSA agreed to lower its proposed standards. Hence the
title of Kennedy’s article “How
the salt campaign was scuppered”. In a
society geared to human welfare, if doctors and nutritionists
concluded that too much of some ingredient (whether salt, or sugar or
fat since it’s the same story there) was
detrimental to people’s health then,
production not being in the hands of profit-seeking enterprises, the
amount of the ingredient going in manufactured foods would be fixed
taking this, and only this, into account.
But
capitalism is not a society geared to serving human welfare.
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