The
$40 Billion Food Fraud Economy
Fake Food Fraud
Have you ever thought to yourself while eating something “Is
this real food?” or “What’s in this?” You probably have many reasons why you
would even consider wondering about those questions. Fake food is real and so
is food fraud. Food fraud is when manufactures or laborers intentionally hide
stuff from us and consumers buy something although it’s not what they think it
is. There is $40 billion dollars worth of food fraud where only 10% of food in
the food industry is actual real food. Anything outside of that 10% is fake food
that is commercially adulterated. There is a public safety concern where fake
food that is also known as Economically Motivated Adulteration (EMA) robs consumers
of nutrients and can potentially kill them.
In this video you see a woman who talks about olive oil. She
starts to pour olive oil straight from the bottle that reads “Extra Virgin
Olive Oil” and as she is pouring it into a small bowl, she “You think this is olive
oil? Wrong.” She explains that in the process of making olive oil a cheaper oil
is mixed in with the olive oil and how the label still reads “100% olive oil.” A
second example given in this video which is parmesan cheese. Foods that say it
contains parmesan cheese were found by the FDA to be false. A third example
given is spices. Spices are known to be vulnerable to food fraud because they
contain high levels of heavy metals and can be mixed and diluted with other
ingredients like plant stems as shown in the video. Why is the FDA doing more
the try to prevent food fraud and fake food from being sold to consumers? The
FDA is only mandated by law to inspect 2% of imported seafood which is very low
seeing that 85% of seafood in the US is imported.
The FDA uses intentional and unintentional means of tracking
safety. Food fraud is motivated by the economical gain where’s the unintentional
is motivated by any harmdoing of fake food consumed. Other than that, there is
no way for the FDA to estimate how often fraud can happen and neither can they
estimate the dilution and substitutions of food. During the pandemic there was
an astonishing 21% increase in food fraud and the more companies can defraud consumers
the more it will cost us. So why is the FDA not doing more to protect consumers
from food fraud and contracting life threatening illnesses from fake food? The
FDA says, “It’s only their job to make sure food doesn’t hurt you not police
the laborers.”
Before watching this video, I was completely unaware that fake
food was a real thing and how dangerous it is. When I go to the grocery store
to buy extra virgin olive oil, I expect it to be just that not diluted olive
oil. When I want to purchase things like spices, fish or something that is
stated on the packaging, I expect it to be those things as stated on the label.
Not things that are loaded with high levels of heavy metals or a cheaper type
of fish instead of the real thing. I don’t think consumers are completely aware
of what is going on in our food industry and what they are buying and
ingesting. This is not fast food so why is there such a large amount of food
fraud and fake food sold in grocery stores? These are now concerns we all need
to be aware of when buying groceries for your next meal. I know I'll be doing more research on fake foods and how to spot them!
Your passage is very detailed and organized. I think you're absolutely right we are buying food that has artificial flavor in it and are not buying the real deal products. I feel like store companies should start getting sued if you ask me.
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