If a Chinese company's bid to acquire Smithfield goes
through, consumers and farmers will suffer.
Paula Deen will have to learn to eat with chopsticks. She'll need to suck up to the new owners now that she's lost her Food Channel gig |
American consumers may
not even notice the change if a newly proposed takeover by China’s largest meat
processor of our nation’s leading pork company goes through. But the $4.7
billion transaction would certainly show up on our plates: in the form of farmer
exploitation, more factory farms, and a more complicated supply chain that
increases the risk of food contamination.
Putting profits above
people is a cross-cultural problem. Smithfield owns more hogs than the next eight
largest U.S. hog producers combined. It slaughters more hogs than any other
company in the world and the company has a growing stranglehold over U.S.
farmers, who have fewer options for selling their hogs at the market and are
prey to abusive contractors from processors like Smithfield.
In fact, Shuanghui,
which is partially
owned by Goldman Sachs,
grew into China’s biggest meat company by adopting the industrialized factory
farm model that American companies like Smithfield pioneered.
The meat industry’s
merger mania in recent decades has produced more U.S. factory farms. Nearly all
of our hogs are now raised in operations that cram more than 2,000 animals
into tight
quarters. We may export much
of this pork, but we keep all those millions of gallons of manure right here at
home, often in hog-heavy North Carolina and Iowa.
This deal is also bad
for consumers. In the long term, Shuanghui may decide to offshore hog
operations to China. If that happens, the United States could wind up importing
the pork it once produced.
The Obama
administration is pushing new trade deals with Europe and Pacific Rim partners,
which China has also expressed interest in joining. These deals promote
transnational megamergers like the Smithfield purchase as much as they promote exports. And
behind closed doors, negotiators weaken food safety and environmental
standards.
Consumers also suffer
from this consolidation of our food system, as the massive egg
recall of 2010 — that involved
half a billion eggs from Iowa factory farms — demonstrated. With just a few
players producing most of what we eat, food safety problems on even a few
factory farms can end up in kitchens across the globe.
In 2011, Shuanghui was
embroiled in a food safety scandal for producing and selling pork laced with
the banned
veterinary drug clenbuterol,
which is linked to serious human health risks. Foreign ownership can only
complicate and shield potential future food safety problems from U.S. oversight.
These deals just
benefit executives and bankers — not the rest of us.
Wenonah Hauter is the executive director of Food & Water
Watch and author of Foodopoly:
The Future of Food and Farming in America. Foodopoly.org.
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