Arbiters of Waste
Arbiters of Waste
Arbiters of Waste
Richard Milne
Abstract: The importance of date labelling in informing both retailers and consumers
how long a food will remain edible, safe and of sufficient quality makes it a prime site
for the identification of, and intervention in, food waste. This paper examines the
historical and spatial evolution of the date labelling system in the UK. The paper
shows how reforms to date marking have occurred in response to shifting concerns
about food quality, safety and latterly waste. It distinguishes four periods during
which labels moved from an internal stock control mechanism to a consumer protection mechanism, a food safety device and recently emerged as a key element in the
fight against food waste. Contributing to recent sociological studies of food labelling,
the paper charts changing understandings of the role of the label in mediating between
consumers, the food industry and regulators. It shows how regulatory objects such as
date labels materialize societal concerns about food and situates contemporary efforts
to reform date labelling in relation to prior articulations of consumer, government
and industry interests.
Keywords: food, regulation, labelling, consumption, waste
Introduction
Food labelling is a key instrument of food policy, and sits between production,
retailing and consumption. Labelling is the site at which the roles and responsibilities of governments, the food industry and consumers in contemporary
food systems are defined and distributed (Morgan et al., 2006; Frohlich, 2011).
However, labels exist in a diverse and rapidly evolving array of forms. In the
UK, discussions of food waste have pointed to labels as contributing to the
unnecessary disposal of edible food by consumers (eg Stuart, 2009; Waste and
Resources Action Programme (WRAP), 2008; Benn, 2009). In September 2011,
the government minister responsible for food, Caroline Spelman, introduced
new expiry date labelling guidelines for food businesses as a contribution to
preventing the yearly waste of an estimated 750 million of food. She described
how the guidance would end the food labelling confusion and make it clear
once and for all when food is good and safe to eat (Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA), 2011a).
The Sociological Review, 60:S2, pp. 84101 (2013), DOI: 10.1111/1467-954X.12039
2013 The Author. Editorial organisation 2013 The Editorial Board of the Sociological Review. Published by
John Wiley & Sons Ltd, 9600 Garsington Road, Oxford OX4 2DQ, UK and 350 Main Street, Malden, MA 02148,
USA
Arbiters of waste: date labels, the consumer and knowing good, safe food
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specific periods in the history of date labelling: a period prior to the late 1960s,
where periodic demands for mandatory expiry labels were deemed impractical;
the introduction of the first mandatory system in the 1970s for the purposes of
consumer protection; the inclusion of date labelling in food safety reforms in the
1980s; and its place in early twenty-first-century debates on food waste.
Despite these difficulties, coded date marking was widely used for stock management of tinned food by the late 1940s, and its use expanded as prepared,
packaged product lines became increasingly common. Retailers also introduced
new systems to manage the freshness of their baked and prepared products. The
visibility of these coded systems led to pressure for decoded, open date
marking, as described by Marks and Spencers technologist Norman Robson:
NR: Wed done a lot of work on this cherry Genoa cake, and when you make it you
make it in a big slab, because to make it smaller affects the quality of it . . . So, what
we did was to build in to the sheets of film a coloured strip, and the colour represented
the day on which the girl cut and wrapped the cake, and then the store would know
when the cake was cut and wrapped and hence they received it, cause they always
received it on the same day as it was cut and wrapped, and how long theyd got to sell
it. And that was really the starting point for real control. And the magic word was
Progby. Purple, red, orange, green, blue, yellow. Six days of the week. And if you
wrapped it on a Monday, you had film with a purple streak in it, and so it went on.
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And that was the first real attempt, certainly for us, to label a perishable food with the
date of packing.
I: But there was no indication on that that would tell the customers to eat within a
week or two days or . . . ?
NR: No, there wasnt initially, but customers started asking questions and so we told
them. And we issued a little ticket which was put on the display explaining what the
coloured strip was . . . Because you really need to come clean with customers they
spot these things and they ask questions and you should answer them . . . But I mean
that was the beginning, as I say, of this freshness story and this dating business thats
now so terribly important.
(Marks and Spencers food technologist Norman Robson, n.d.1)
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sumers (Turner, 1995), the Food Standards Committee was asked to revisit the
question in the early 1970s. Its final report reflected wider assertions of the
consumers right to know (cf. Trentmann, 2006) in recommending the introduction of mandatory labelling. For the British Food Journal, the decision to
introduce date labelling was:
a timely reminder of what public pressure can achieve these days; how sustained
advocacy and publicity by interested sectors of society . . . can secure legislative
changes which . . . run counter to trade opinions. (Anon., 1973: 71)
The British Food Journal editorial reflected the transformation of the consumer
questions posed to Marks and Spencers into an organized campaign led by
The Sunday Times, consumer-oriented MPs in Parliament and newly formed
consumer organizations. In response, the government established the Steering
Group on Food Freshness (SGFF) to advise on labelling under the leadership
of Patricia McLaughlin, ex-MP and co-founder of consumer organization the
Housewives Trust. The steering groups report (SGFF, 1976) formed the basis
not only for subsequent regulation but also for the British position within
European negotiations over the harmonization of labelling.
The SGFF report reflected the continuing consensus that the safety of food
was sufficiently covered by existing legislation and that the important task for
new regulation was to ensure the taste, texture and acceptability of food (cf.
Cooter and Fulton, 2001). It separated foods into four groups on the basis of
their shelf-life, in which greatest concern is for those products with very short
shelf-lives, such as sausages, pies, soft cheese and cream cakes. The focus of the
report was overwhelmingly on freshness and quality, and the reference to the
potentially serious adverse effects of these products was the only time that it
concerned itself with food safety.
Even once a decision had been taken to introduce labelling, the structure and
content of the labels continued to be contested. The consumer may have had the
right to know, but what they needed to know, and how this was established, had
not been determined. For example, a commentary on food labelling from dietician Jenny Salmon in the Journal of Nutrition and Food Science argued that the
labelling system would not fulfil the consumers requirements for freshness:
because people have been told for years that old food is stale food and may be off the
consumers demand is interpreted by some people as meaning she wants date stamps,
dates of production or eat by dates. How wrong can you be? She doesnt really want any
of those. They are simply the inadequate terms she uses to express her wish for fresh
food. No date stamp is going to guarantee that. (Salmon, 1977: 4; my emphasis)
For Salmon, date labels were an ineffective proxy for freshness, and reflected the
inability of the consumer to clearly represent their own demands. Salmons
concerns illustrate how the introduction of labelling opened up a space for a
range of interest groups to emphasize their own ability to interpret consumer
demand and introduce their own representations of the consumer. As the system
focused on providing consumers with knowledge, those who could establish that
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Arbiters of waste: date labels, the consumer and knowing good, safe food
they best knew or best represented the consumer interest were able to comment
most authoritatively on the suitability of different labels.
In line with the 1973 recommendations of the Food Standards Committee, a
sell-by date label had been widely adopted on a voluntary basis by food
businesses concerned with pre-empting regulatory intervention. This wording
was recommended by the SGFF and represented the food industrys preferred
option, and was one aimed at the retailer. However, with the UKs accession
to the European Union in 1973 and participation in efforts at regulatory harmonization, its food politics became entwined with those of Europe. Other
European member states and consumer groups favoured the adoption of a
best-before or eat by date dates aimed at the consumer rather than at
businesses.
As the debate developed, each actor focused on their (assumed) superior
ability to act as spokespersons for the concerned consumer. For example, in a
House of Lords debate in March 1977, Lord Mottistone, Director of the Cake
and Biscuit Alliance, challenged the ability of consumer interests to represent
the consumer, arguing that:
manufacturers listen to what the consumers say. After all, their livelihood depends upon
the consumers; so there is not much problem there. The fact of the matter is that there
is sometimes a tendency to listen to people who say they are consumers rather than to
representatives of consumers . . . it is very important to make the distinction. One
would suggest to the Government that the manufacturer probably knows his consumers
better than the Government do, or possibly sometimes the organisations which purport to
represent them. (House of Lords 17/3/77, emphasis added).
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the CA to validate the need for research, Shaw then introduced a further survey,
sponsored by a major meat producer, which trumped that of the CA by
suggesting that the public supported the industry preference for sell-by rather
than eat-by or best-before dating.
The contested knowledge associated with introduction of date labels corresponded not only to the use of labels and the representation of the consumer, but
the definition of labels themselves and the representation of material changes
in food products. Early resistance to labels had focused on the difficulties of
ensuring correspondence between the label and the qualities of the product.
Mandatory labels, therefore, required the production of reliable knowledge
about product longevity, or shelf life. The SGFF report argued that this had to
be the responsibility of manufacturers, as the food retail sector was too diverse
to ensure accurate checking. The report suggested that while the larger supermarket retailers might be able to undertake ongoing checks for freshness, such
company stores were too few and far between for this to be practical. Consequently, food manufacturers required a stable definition of freshness that could
be applied at the point foods left the production line. However, as described in
a 1973 article in the British Food Journal:
when we come to such items as sandwich cakes and swiss rolls, which deteriorate
gradually . . . it is not so easy to know where to draw the line . . . It is in the
manufacturers interests to carry out tests to ascertain the stage at which the cakes will
no longer appeal to customers. (Stafford, 1973: 146)
As shelf-life literally could not be determined on the shelf, actors from without
the production system had to be incorporated, namely via a tasting panel with
members drawn from both production and sales departments, together with
some housewives (Stafford, 1973: 146). The recommendations from this panel
place the consumer within the definition of shelf life and the bounding of
freshness, highlighting the in-folding of linear production-consumption relations as the consumer now became physically as well as virtually present within
quality assessment. Tasting panels, therefore, enabled date labels to reflect a
specific representation of consumers tastes and expectations.
Establishing and asserting freshness immediately raised concerns about the
waste of stock, and thus the loss of profits, for food businesses. As a British Food
Journal editorial described in 1971:
The main objection by the trade against actual date stamping is that shoppers will
naturally take the freshest, according to the date, leaving the later packets, with
resultant losses. (Anon., 1971: 72)
Arbiters of waste: date labels, the consumer and knowing good, safe food
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assumed control of standards for food and food labelling jointly with the Ministry of Health.
Although they led ultimately to a widespread questioning of the productivist
paradigm of the UK food system in light of BSE, the first food scares of the
1980s were primarily associated with changes in food preparation and retail,
particularly the spread of cook/chill foods. Such foods were seen as introducing
new and serious microbiological risks to the food supply. The first major
food scare was an outbreak of Salmonella in 1988 which infected people
throughout the country, including 120 members of the House of Lords. It was
closely followed by what was termed Listeria hysteria: several outbreaks of
listeriosis, with the bacteria consequently found to be widespread in cheeses,
cooked meats and pts.
As food scares seemed to proliferate through Britain, the regulatory framework for food, and the role of MAFF, understandably came under heavy
scrutiny. Date labelling suddenly shifting from being a tool of consumer
information and protection became newly problematized as a failing element
in the regulation of pre-packed foods. Consequently, as the regulatory system
was reworked, date labels moved from being a consumer-oriented tool primarily
concerned with ensuring food quality to be at the heart of the regulation of food
safety throughout systems of food production and consumption.
In February 1989, the Institute of Environmental Health Officers warned that
sell-by dates on perishable chilled products did not represent safety, and called
for the introduction of eat by dates (Hall, 1989), thus resurrecting the wording
debates of a decade earlier. Later in the same year, as concerns about food safety
continued to mount, the Guardians resident poet Simon Rae positioned date
labelling among the myriad problems of the British food system:
Another day, another chefs selection
Fresh from the current Bad Food Guide;
And then the accusations, counter-claims
As someone totals up who died:
The elderly, the weak, the unarrived
(The fit and strong, quite unconcerned, survive).
The experts wring their hands and mutter darkly,
There is a lot of it about.
The dose-response relationships not known,
However, there can be no doubt
We need to spend more on research, not less,
If we are going to overcome this mess.
The Government is getting quite defensive
At having to explain away
What seems to absolutely everyone
An inexplicable delay
In warning people of the risk they take
When eating almost anything but steak.
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Arbiters of waste: date labels, the consumer and knowing good, safe food
Pressure for reform resulted in changes to the labelling system. The UK not only
implemented new EC Directives (89/395/EEC), but also went further both with
its own specific hygiene and labelling requirements in 1989 and in the later 1990
Food Safety Act. The EU directive, however, removed the UKs derogation and
signalled the end of the sell-by date. Instead, it introduced use-by dating for
foods deemed hazardous to health after a short period of time (Turner, 1995).
Best-before labelling was also extended to a wider range of long-life products
and frozen foods, while hygiene regulations created a chill chain requiring food
businesses to store chilled short-life foods between 0 and 8C.
The food scares also prompted the commissioning of the Richmond Report
on the Microbiological Safety of Food. The first volume of this report, published in 1990, welcomed the changes to the labelling system:
the introduction of the use by date . . . will mean that microbiological considerations
must be taken into account. This should in turn ensure that the dates shown on food are
far more directly related to the assurance of food safety than has been the case hitherto.
(Richmond, 1990: 144; my emphasis)
With the introduction of the use by framework, the labelling system extended
to explicitly cover food safety. As Raes poem suggests, the food safety concerns
of the 1980s prompted changes in the institutional knowledge requirements
associated with the regulation of food. In a publication in early 1989, the
National Consumer Council (NCC), led by the now Baroness OppenheimBarnes, argued that while consumers had a duty to observe date marks,
above all, [they] need to know the degree of risk, if there is any, of food contamination.
They need consistent and reliable information. They need to know that research is
adequate. (cited in Hornsby, 1989)
By this time the dominant concern of the NCC, ostensibly spokesperson for the
consumer had become the risk of contamination rather than the threat of
deception. This redefinition of food in terms of risk and safety correspondingly
required new definitions of the limits of food that could reflect the shifting
constituency of date labelling. While the 1979 system involved freshness samThe Sociological Review, 60:S2, pp. 84101 (2013), DOI: 10.1111/1467-954X.12039
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Richard Milne
The use-by labelling regime introduced new forms of knowledge and expertise
and rigorous requirements for testing, as well as an enhanced role for qualified
experts. Specifically, it introduced endpoints for food defined in terms of its
microbiological load rather than consumer taste.
The changes to date labels, together with their association with new forms of
knowledge production, fundamentally changed the role and responsibilities of
the consumer. In the pursuit of food safety for the population, the views and
tastes of consumers were subordinated to microbiological expertise. Consumer
bodies such as the NCC also shifted their focus onto the systemic, invisible and
unavoidable risks posed by food as opposed to the more visible threat of the
untrustworthy shopkeeper. Whereas consumer tastes had earlier been virtually,
and sometimes physically, present within quality definition, the new food safety
regimes in contrast constructed consumer behaviour as an object of concern.
For the use-by system to work, for example, the Richmond report stressed that
government would need to . . . remind consumers from time to time of the
meaning of the use by date and of the risks of not observing it (Richmond,
1990: 144).
The report also stressed that consumers were part of the solution as well as
the problem, describing their responsibility to check for poor practices at the
point of sale, such as food past its date mark (Richmond, 1990: 145). However,
while the sell-by date had historically stopped at the retailer, the new regulations moved the site at which food safety was seen by the state that is, the point
at which the life of food officially ended into the consumer home. Use-by
labelling thus represented part of the re-imagining of the home as the arena of
food safety management, resonantly captured in the description of the domestic
kitchen as the last line of defence in the food chain (Richmond, 1990: 145).
Arbiters of waste: date labels, the consumer and knowing good, safe food
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Richard Milne
Unlike previous debates around date labelling which pushed reform of labels
themselves these discussions focus on the consumer and reflect a wider
problematization of consumer behaviour and knowledge related to food. In the
1970s debates on labelling, knowledge of food quality was considered as something that had been unfairly taken away from the British consumer, as in
Oppenheims comparison with the French and in campaigns by the then-new
consumer organizations. In contrast, by the 2000s, a lack of knowledge about
food has become the consumers responsibility, while the role of the state is to
provide the information required for the exercise of responsible citizenship and
effective self-governance (see Draper and Green, 2002; Frohlich, 2011; Watson
and Meah, this volume).
Concerns about consumers are again tied up with the long-standing challenge
of knowing how long food lasts, and on what terms it can be deemed to be
inedible. For Stuart, WRAP, Benn and Spelman, consumer confusion is exacerbated by inconsistent and/or unnecessary labelling. Indeed, Stuart (2009)
approvingly quotes US industry body the Food Marketing Institute in their
opposition to overly-complex date labels, citing this as the reign of common
sense. WRAP point to the case of four Cheddar cheeses to demonstrate the
vagaries of the labelling system (Parry, 2009). Within the same product group,
they highlight the variation in the application of use-by or best-before labels
that is, between the definition of the product as either potentially unsafe or as
simply likely to lose quality. This perceived unreliability of date labelling has
prompted the commissioning of the new guidance described earlier (DEFRA,
2011a, 2011b) together with Spelmans suggestion that such guidance would
lead to the clear identification of good, safe food.
The DEFRA guidance (2011b) addresses variation by introducing a programmatic decision tree for labelling. This starts from an initial distinction
between microbiologically perishable and non-perishable goods. However, as a
worked example of yoghurt provided in Figure 1 shows, this line is difficult to
maintain.
The final distinction between use-by and best-before for Yoghurt B
depends on judgements made at a series of stages. The decision tree suggests this
is related to the intrinsic qualities of the product. However, the accompanying
documentation makes it clear that labelling decisions also reflect the material
and social contexts of food manufacture. Making a judgement between a useby date (which may lead to unnecessary waste) or a best-before date (which
may lead to unnecessary risk) requires the manufacturer to be confident in their
knowledge not only of the product, but also perhaps more importantly their
control of the production environment. Thus, at Q2, a best-before label is
applied to Yoghurt A, a similar product to Yoghurt B. This decision is not made
on the certainty that B will represent a risk, but on proxies including the
manufacturers record of hygiene and knowledge of the behaviour of Listeria
monocytogenes in the product. The manufacturer of Yoghurt B has only had
very occasional detection of L. monocytogenes, yet has no evidence that it will
not grow in the product (DEFRA, 2011b: 16). Consequently, yoghurt produced
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Arbiters of waste: date labels, the consumer and knowing good, safe food
Figure 1: Decision tree for date labelling of yoghurts from DEFRA (2011b).
by this manufacturer is deemed a potential threat regardless of its own inherent
characteristics. The choice of label is therefore determined by the manufacturers past control over production and their access to appropriate forms of
microbiological evidence and expertise.
Moreover, in debates about food waste, the ability or inability of the science
of shelf-life to provide accurate guides to food decay and deterioration has also
become a key point of contest. These contested (in)abilities reopen the closures
of the 1970s and 1980s related to the appropriate production of knowledge. For
The Sociological Review, 60:S2, pp. 84101 (2013), DOI: 10.1111/1467-954X.12039
2013 The Author. Editorial organisation 2013 The Editorial Board of the Sociological Review
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Richard Milne
Arbiters of waste: date labels, the consumer and knowing good, safe food
Acknowledgements
Thanks are due to the editors and anonymous reviewers for their helpful and
insightful comments and suggestions on previous versions of this paper. Thanks
The Sociological Review, 60:S2, pp. 84101 (2013), DOI: 10.1111/1467-954X.12039
2013 The Author. Editorial organisation 2013 The Editorial Board of the Sociological Review
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Richard Milne
Note
1 Interview in British Library Food Stories archive, http://www.bl.uk/learning/resources/pdf/
foodstories/robsoncaketranscript.pdf (accessed 11 November 2011).
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