Free trade means we need better inspections
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By Wu Pei-Ing professor of the department of Agriculture Economics, National Taiwan University published in Taipei Times, October 3,2008,Page 8 Translated by Ted Yang
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Since the news broke that melamine-tainted
products from
However,
a more worrying question is how many of the products on store shelves meet
safety standards. The public was shocked when the Department of Health
changed the standard for melamine from zero parts per million (ppm) to
2.5ppm. The change was made because detection instruments cannot detect
levels down to zero ppm and because the department is only responsible for
defining tolerable intake of “food additives.”
Apart from
the change in inspection standards, which upset the public, the government
failed to take any precautions. Our government thinks that the free trade
promoted by our membership in the WTO will create a strong economy, with
products from all over the world freely entering
Within
In
order to protect public health and ensure fair trade, the WHO and the Food
and Agriculture Organization established the Codex Alimentarius Commission
in 1962. In particular, to ensure health and food safety, the commission has
developed a series of labeling regulations for food products since 1993 to
declare ingredients and processing information. In addition, each country
sets its own regulations.
Because these rules involve fair trade, the WTO also created the Committee
on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, which is aimed at providing
guidelines for food products.
Advanced countries like members of the EU often require that controversial
imported products such as genetically modified food that may have negative
effects on health, have clear labels. The requirement is strict enough to
constitute an alternative to tariffs and is thus a TBT. All disputes are
handled by arbitration and inspections carried out by a TBT committee, as
are products suspected or proven to have detrimental effects on humans. |
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