Institute for Physical Activity and Nutrition, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia.
University of California, Davis, CA, USA.
Global Health. 2021 May 21;17(1):58. doi: 10.1186/s12992-021-00708-1.
The global milk formula market has 'boomed' in recent decades, raising serious concerns for breastfeeding, and child and maternal health. Despite these developments, few studies have investigated the global expansion of the baby food industry, nor the market and political practices corporations have used to grow and sustain their markets. In this paper, our aim is to understand the strategies used by the baby food industry to shape 'first-foods systems' across its diverse markets, and in doing so, drive milk formula consumption on a global scale. We used a theoretically guided synthesis review method, which integrated diverse qualitative and quantitative data sources.
Global milk formula sales grew from ~US$1.5 billion in 1978 to US$55.6 billion in 2019. This remarkable expansion has occurred along two main historical axes. First, the widening geographical reach of the baby food industry and its marketing practices, both globally and within countries, as corporations have pursued new growth opportunities, especially in the Global South. Second, the broadening of product ranges beyond infant formula, to include an array of follow-up, toddler and specialized formulas for a wider range of age groups and conditions, thereby widening the scope of mother-child populations subject to commodification. Sophisticated marketing techniques have been used to grow and sustain milk formula consumption, including marketing through health systems, mass-media and digital advertising, and novel product innovations backed by corporate science. To enable and sustain this marketing, the industry has engaged in diverse political practices to foster favourable policy, regulatory and knowledge environments. This has included lobbying international and national policy-makers, generating and deploying favourable science, leveraging global trade rules and adopting corporate policies to counter regulatory action by governments.
The baby food industry uses integrated market and political strategies to shape first-foods systems in ways that drive and sustain milk formula market expansion, on a global scale. Such practices are a major impediment to global implementation of the International Code of Marketing of Breastmilk Substitutes, and other policy actions to protect, promote and support breastfeeding. New modalities of public health action are needed to negate the political practices of the industry in particular, and ultimately to constrain corporate power over the mother-child breastfeeding dyad.
近几十年来,全球奶粉市场“蓬勃发展”,这对母乳喂养以及儿童和产妇健康造成了严重影响。尽管出现了这些新情况,但几乎没有研究调查婴儿食品行业的全球扩张,也没有研究企业用来扩大和维持市场的市场和政治策略。本文的目的是了解婴儿食品行业在其多样化的市场中塑造“第一食品系统”所使用的策略,从而在全球范围内推动奶粉消费。我们使用了一种理论指导的综合审查方法,该方法整合了各种定性和定量数据源。
全球奶粉销售额从 1978 年的约 15 亿美元增长到 2019 年的 556 亿美元。这种显著的扩张是沿着两条主要的历史轴线发生的。首先,随着企业寻求新的增长机会,尤其是在全球南方,婴儿食品行业及其营销活动在全球和各国的地理覆盖范围不断扩大,其营销活动也在不断扩大。其次,产品范围从婴儿配方奶粉扩大到包括一系列后续配方奶粉、幼儿配方奶粉和专门配方奶粉,以涵盖更广泛的年龄组和条件,从而扩大了受商品化影响的母婴人群范围。该行业采用了复杂的营销策略来扩大和维持奶粉消费,包括通过卫生系统、大众媒体和数字广告进行营销,以及在企业科学的支持下推出新颖的产品创新。为了实现和维持这种营销,该行业采取了各种政治策略,以营造有利的政策、监管和知识环境。这包括游说国际和国家政策制定者、制定和部署有利的科学、利用全球贸易规则以及采用企业政策来应对政府的监管行动。
婴儿食品行业采用综合的市场和政治策略来塑造第一食品系统,从而在全球范围内推动和维持奶粉市场的扩张。这些做法是全球实施《国际母乳代用品销售守则》以及其他保护、促进和支持母乳喂养的政策行动的主要障碍。需要采取新的公共卫生行动模式,以否定该行业的政治策略,最终限制企业对母婴母乳喂养对子的权力。