Meatonomics (4 page)

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Authors: David Robinson Simon

BOOK: Meatonomics
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The message set out in the beef promotions is from beginning to end the message established by the Federal Government. . . . Congress and the Secretary [of the USDA] have set out the overarching message and some of its elements, and they have left the development of the remaining details to an entity whose members are answerable to the Secretary (and in some cases appointed by him as well).

Moreover, the record demonstrates that the Secretary exercises final approval authority over every word used in every promotional campaign. All proposed promotional messages are reviewed by [USDA] Department officials both for substance and for wording, and some proposals are rejected or rewritten by the Department. . . . Nor is the Secretary's role limited to final approval or rejection: Officials of the Department also attend and participate in the open meetings at which proposals are developed.
10

This crystal-clear language from the highest court in the land leaves little doubt that the beef checkoff program, and the messages it generates, are the product of the federal government. Simple logic shows that other animal food checkoff programs, which were established by Congress in the same way and are similarly administered by the USDA, are equally the mouthpieces of the federal government. So when one of these organizations speaks—regardless of the product it's hawking—it may say it's the National Pork Board, but the background sounds you're hearing are the imposing bass tones of the US government.

In fact, the government's continued regulatory involvement is a necessary component for mandatory checkoffs to remain legally and operationally viable. If Congress simply created a checkoff program and then stepped aside to let industry run it, the First Amendment's free speech protections would likely prevent the industry majority
from bullying dissenters into participating in its message.
11
Under those circumstances, forget the government speech exception: it wouldn't apply and individual participants could opt out. The result would be a checkoff program that is in fact optional, not mandatory.

Why does that matter? Because such a scenario would likely undercut the force of the messaging. As research on optional checkoffs shows, economic free riders—those group members who opt out of paying for all the snazzy commercials but still enjoy their benefits—significantly lower the effectiveness of such programs.
12
Ultimately, a lack of government involvement would likely lead to the decline—or maybe the end—of checkoffs.

Checking Out Checkoffs

Few people have heard of checkoffs, and fewer still have considered their effects. Yet these programs have a number of important consequences, some good and some bad, that merit attention. First and foremost, checkoffs stimulate the economy. By boosting sales, checkoffs create jobs and drive spending. As the USDA puts it, “The fundamental goal of every checkoff program is to increase commodity demand, which increases the potential long-term economic growth of all sectors of the industry and the communities in which they operate.”
13

With a few calculations, we can estimate the overall economic effect of checkoffs. It's a full-fledged bonanza: As
table 1.1
shows, the USDA's figures for return on investment from checkoff funds suggest that checkoffs boost sales of animal foods by about $4.6 billion.
14
There's also a multiplier effect related to this sales increase: checkoffs create new jobs, and that in turn increases spending. Applying the typical multiplier used by researchers (0.77) to the sales total yields $8.2 billion in total economic stimulus related to animal food checkoffs.
15
Not bad, but what about the other side of the ledger?

For starters, animal food production generates large external costs—expenses that producers impose on society instead of paying themselves. In the book's second half, we'll see that for each $1 of animal food sold at retail, the industry generates about $1.70 in external costs. Applying this ratio to the $4.6 billion sales figure reveals that
checkoffs generate roughly $7.8 billion in external costs
not reflected
in the retail prices of the goods they promote. That's nearly equal to the economic activity they generate. As with many of the interesting equations that meatonomics presents, the $64,000 question is whether the trade-off is worth it.

TABLE 1.1
Effects of Checkoff Spending on Animal Food Sales (dollar amounts in millions)
16

Checkoffs, moreover, cause us to buy more animal foods than we would otherwise. Yet judging from the data, Americans already eat plenty of these foods and don't need more. Teenagers, for example, consume 78 percent more saturated fat and 48 percent more cholesterol—both linked primarily or exclusively to animal foods—than government guidelines recommend.
17
One in three US teenagers is obese or overweight, triple the rate in 1963, and a growing number have diabetes or high blood pressure—diseases directly linked to meat and dairy consumption and formerly seen only rarely before adulthood.
18

Nevertheless, the USDA keeps urging these kids to eat more of the very foods that help make them fat and unhealthy. The huge milk promotion Fuel Up to Play 60, for instance, enjoys more than $50 million yearly in government-mandated funding and reaches 36 million students in seventy thousand schools.
19
And checkoff funding helped the Dairy Board team with Domino's Pizza to offer pizzas in two thousand US schools.
20
Yet it's not just kids who overindulge; as
table 2.1
in
chapter 2
shows, adult Americans also routinely consume more animal foods than the USDA recommends.

Weird Science

With annual promotional funds of $389 million, the dairy industry enjoys nearly three times the checkoff spending of all fruit and vegetable producers combined (not to mention a marketing budget that would be the envy of many a Hollywood studio).
21
To look at it another way, dairy spends more on advertising in one week than the blueberry, mango, watermelon, and mushroom industries spend together in a year.
22
Under federal law, checkoff funds are intended to be used for both promotion and research. Thus, the National Dairy Council, the largest of dairy's many checkoff-funded arms, boasts that it “partners with top universities and other research facilities across the United States to support nutrition research efforts.”
23
Dairy research, funded by at least $58 million yearly, is largely focused on finding ways to convince consumers that dairy is healthy.

Since industry-funded research might be suspect, dairy takes steps to ensure its research appears unbiased. For scientific credibility, research must be published in a respected, peer-reviewed journal. But here's the rub: the National Dairy Council ensures access to such journals, and the benevolence of their editorial boards, by donating cash to a number of nutritional organizations. These include the American Society for Nutrition (whose other corporate sponsors include Dannon and McDonald's) and the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (brought to you by the National Cattlemen's Beef Association).
24
Both organizations publish prestigious research journals.

The “best source for the most accurate, credible and timely food and nutrition information,” boasts the website of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. But what's left unsaid is the Academy, formerly known as the American Dietetic Association (ADA), has a particularly cozy relationship with dairy. As the world's largest organization of food and nutrition professionals, with over seventy thousand members, it's easy to see how food industry players can benefit
from access to this influential group. This begs the question, just how accurate and credible
is
the organization's nutrition advice?

In a 2007 press release discussing a major increase in the size of the National Dairy Council's funding commitment, the ADA said the sponsorship arrangement gave dairy producers “prominent access to key influencers, thought leaders and decision-makers in the food and nutrition marketplace.”
25
The release went on to illustrate, with candor, how the relationship benefits the Dairy Council. One quid pro quo of past sponsorship apparently included the ADA's endorsement of the Dairy Council's “3-A-Day of Dairy” campaign, which educates consumers and health professionals about the nutrition and health benefits of consuming three servings of fat-free or low-fat milk, cheese and yogurt a day.”
26
The ADA release didn't disclose the extent of the Dairy Council's generosity, but judging from the size of other contributions from animal food producers to nonprofits, it's safe to assume it wasn't insignificant. The National Livestock and Meat Board, for example, gave $189,000 in one year to the American Heart Association.
27

Dairy also seeks to extend its scientific influence by installing its people on boards, committees, and editorial panels of nutritional organizations and their journals. One of these people is Gregory Miller, who serves in multiple capacities—president of the Dairy Research Institute, executive vice president of the Dairy Council, and committee chair for the American Society for Nutrition.

Miller and I spoke about dairy research. Among other things, I was curious about studies that have looked at industry influence in the scientific process. These studies find that industry-funded research is up to four times more likely to reach conclusions favorable to the sponsor than unfavorable.
28
In one of these studies, researchers found that “systematic bias favors products which are made by the company funding the research.”
29

According to Miller, the dairy industry provides a sort of public service through its support of nutrition research. “With government funding continuing to shrink,” Miller told me, “industry has a responsibility to help fund some of the research that needs to be done out there.” In light of such apparently selfless motives, who could accuse
the dairy industry of bias? Furthermore, Miller assured me dairy research is
not
biased, twice using the Fox News slogan “fair and balanced” to drive home the point.

But what about the study that found industry-supported research is four times more likely to reach conclusions favorable to its sponsor? “That study design is somewhat flawed,” Miller told me. “I would take it with a grain of salt.”

Miller sent me a number of published articles from industry-funded research. These studies have titles like “Dairy Calcium Intake, Serum Vitamin D, and Successful Weight Loss” and, even catchier, “Drinking Flavored or Plain Milk is Positively Associated with Nutrient Intake and Is Not Associated with Adverse Effects on Weight Status in US Children and Adolescents.” For anyone interested in just how fair and balanced this research is, a look at one study is enlightening.

In 2010, researcher Patty Siri-Tarino of the Children's Hospital Oakland Research Institute and three colleagues published an article that found consumption of saturated fat does
not
cause heart disease.
30
This article's surprising conclusion runs contrary to a significant and consistent line of published research that finds exactly the opposite—that dietary saturated fat causes heart disease.
31
Not surprisingly, the news that eating fat doesn't lead to heart disease hit the blogs like celebrity wedding gossip. The animal food industry now trumpets the Siri-Tarino study as one of several said to debunk the “myth” that saturated fat is unhealthy.
32

Unfortunately for those of us who love fatty foods, this news doesn't call for a celebratory pizza. The Siri-Tarino study suffers from what many research scientists consider a defect in methodology: failure to appropriately control for an important confounding factor. Siri-Tarino's article is a meta-study—that is, it compiles and evaluates research from a number of studies to reach an empirical conclusion. The saturated fat studies analyzed in Siri-Tarino all use the cohort research model, which compares different groups to determine their incidence of disease over time. In any cohort study, confounding factors that could skew the results must be controlled. For example, because elderly people have a categorically higher incidence of heart
disease than children, comparing a high-fat eating cohort of octogenarians to a fat-free group of teenagers would be misleading—we wouldn't know if the teenagers' lower heart disease rate was related to their age or their diet.

The studies assessed by Siri-Tarino generally identified and adjusted for a number of confounding factors, such as age, gender, and lifestyle. So far, so good. But they
did not
adjust for the single most important confounding factor that any study of the health effects of fat or cholesterol in an animal food must: consumption of other animal foods. All animal foods routinely contain both saturated fat and dietary cholesterol, and surprisingly, low-fat animal foods like chicken and salmon are actually chock-full of cholesterol.
33
Accordingly, any study that seeks to assess the effect of saturated fat on health
must control for the confounding effect of dietary cholesterol.
The best way to do this is to compare a group whose members eat both saturated fat
and
cholesterol with a group whose members eat less fat and
no
cholesterol.

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