June 2020

The Labyrinth of Multinational Food Brands

Big Food is driving out smaller businesses. To truly understand how customers need to first realize how interconnected the big brands are. A lot of time they invest in start-up businesses to be allowed access to their market and insights (“Small Steps”). There is always an ulterior motive.  Big Food is smart about where they put their money to get the most out of it. The food industry, “plays better politics than anyone” (“PLoS”).

One example of this is large drink companies partnering with the most popular fast food brands. In doing this they get a massive amount of sales with minimal amount of work, for example Wimpy and Nado’s, popular fast food restaurants in South Africa, only serves Coca-Cola products (Igumbor et al). Until recently, McDonalds almost exclusively sold Coca-Cola, and it still is the majority of soft drinks at the fast food chain. Big Food is dominating every market without customers even realizing.

To help customers get a good idea of the extent of their dominance, they need to know what brands are affiliated with even bigger brands. One example is Smucker’s, Pillsbury and General Mills. Pillsbury was originally an independently owned business until in 2001 when General Mills bought it from them. However, General Mills was forced to sell the dry-baking products like cake mixes to Smucker’s. In 2018, Brynwood Partners bought the baking business from Smucker’s, an exchange worth $375 million dollars. Brynwood Partner is described as a private equity, but do not mistake it for a small business win because this company is the owner of two big drink brands, SunnyD and Juicy Juice (“Smucker”).

Some other examples are Annie’s Homegrown Inc., which has been owned by General Mills since 2014, and Kashi, a business that sells healthy snacks, was bought by Kellogg in 2000. Sales fell for a decade after Kellogg bought it. After Hershey bought Skinny Pop, it kept Amplify Snack Brands, the previous owner’s headquarters, so Hershey had better access to other smaller brands affiliated with Amplify Snack Brands (“Small Steps”). One last example: For $11 billion, the maker of Chef Boyardee is buying Pinnacle Foods, the owner of Mrs. Butterworth, Duncan Hines, and many other familiar brands (“Smucker”).

It is quite easy to get lost in Google searches trying to trace a small brand back to its big owner, but for the most part there always is a bigger brand behind the small ones that people love. The easiest way to avoid this is supporting local businesses. 

 As big companies become more and more dominant, smaller businesses struggle. Some Big Food companies’ annual revenue is equal to the annual gross domestic product of a middle-sized country (Monteiro and Canon). This surplus of money allows them to strategically invest their money in new markets, making it really hard for start-ups to get going.

Mass marketing is expensive and necessary to promote big brands. In contrast, new brands do not need as much advertising (“Small Steps”). For this reason, Big Food invests in these newer brands by offering deals that they cannot refuse. Big Food only cares about making money, driving them to use corrupt tactics, such as, targeting kids in commercials. About 16% of advertisements during kids TV are food products and 55% of these have essentially no nutritional value (Igumbor et al). Much like the tobacco industry of old, they are targeting youth, so they have lifelong customers.

The sad part is that their tactics are very effective. “The top ten soft drink companies account for 79% of the total soft drink sales in South Africa,” and “the largest ten packaged food companies in South Africa accounts for 51.8% of total packaged food sales” (Igumbor et al).

This is ruining the food environment; we need variety in our stores. All that can be found in grocery stores are different products made by the same ten companies who have the same philosophy: make money. Variation in grocery stores is necessary. That variation is offered by small brands that care about their customers, but how can they justify refusing millions of dollars from a Big Food company?

An example of Big Food taking over local businesses is a Brazilian restaurant. The bottled water offered in the restaurant is made by a Brazilian company that is now owned by Coca-Cola. The local water-based ice lollies that used to be sold there now have been replaced by sugary Nestle ice cream (Monteiro and Cannon). Every time a customer buys from Big Food, they are supporting and allowing them to take over. 

Works Cited

Igumbor, Ehimario U., et al. “‘Big Food,’ the consumer food environment, health, and the policy response in South Africa.” PLoS Medicine, vol. 9, no. 7, 2012. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A299885106/OVIC?u=mtlib_2_906&sid =OVIC&xid=3ea2cd44. Accessed 29 Jan. 2020.

Monteiro, Carlos A., and Geoffrey Cannon. “The impact of transnational ‘Big Food’ companies on the South: a view from Brazil.” PLoS Medicine, vol. 9, no. 7, 2012. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A299885105/OVIC?u=mtlib_2_906&sid =OVIC&xid=171adff1. Accessed 31 Jan. 2020.

“PLoS medicine series on Big Food: the food industry is ripe for scrutiny.” PLoS Medicine, vol. 9, no. 6, 2012. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A295 420282/OVIC?u=mtlib_2_906&sid=OVIC&xid=7873be40. Accessed 31 Jan. 2020.

“Small steps for big food brands.” Australian [National, Australia], 1 Oct. 2018, p. 22. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A556429574/OVIC?u=mtlib_2_9 06&sid=OVIC&xid=e99ae07b. Accessed 28 Jan. 2020.

“Smucker is saying goodbye to the Pillsbury Doughboy.” CNN Wire, 10 July 2018. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A545986060/OVIC?u=mtlib_2_ 906&sid=OVIC&xid=9151c65b. Accessed 28 Jan. 2020.

“Multinational corporations and a market economy have transformed human beings into instruments of making money.”

–Satish Kumar

Why Quotes of the Day?

On my website I have a Quote of the Day. Often, they will relate to my blog posts that week or may just be fun and inspiring quotes that I like and want to share.

I am a HUGE nerd when it comes to interpreting the English language, I will spend hours analyzing books or even movies with my sister Lizzie. I love reading especially thought provoking and meaningful books. I love writing and in general I love words. It excites me when I am able to put my thoughts down in words and can convey my feeling through the perfect use of vocabulary, cadence and style. I love having my own voice in my writing and having my name attached to my words.

All in all, “I like good strong words that mean something.” –Jo March.

In all my nerdiness, quotes satisfy me. I love finding quotes that relate to me and how I am feeling at any given time. I love reading other people’s words and hearing their voice and being inspired by them.

So, I hope that in reading my Quotes of the Day you find the same joy that I do in finding them and sharing them.

“Earth provides enough to satisfy every man’s needs, but not every man’s greed.”

-Mahatma Gandhi

Convenience Brings Earth to its Knees

Big Food produces a massive amount of greenhouse gas and is heavily contributing to plastic pollution that is littering our planet.

This is the second in a series of blog posts derived from my Great Falls High Junior Research Paper, “Big Food’s Reign of Terror.”

Plastic has grown in popularity since its invention because it is lightweight, inexpensive, and convenient. There is a customer demand for plastic packaging because of how easily it can be disposed of and companies like Coca-Cola are catering to this demand (Bandoim).

While each individual can easily dispose of a plastic bottle, it becomes a much more difficult task when 7.7 billion people do not consider the lasting impact their plastic trash has on the environment. How do we dispose of 600,000 square miles of garbage in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch?

There is so much plastic being produced in the U.S. that China and other countries are refusing to take any more for recycling. Instead the plastic is being burned. This is causing more greenhouse gases to be emitted into the atmosphere.

Big Food produces the majority of this plastic with, “Coca-Cola, Nestle, and PepsiCo [being] the top plastic polluters globally” (Bandoim). Every time a customer buys a Coca-Cola product in a plastic bottle or Nestle’s chocolate chips in a plastic bag, they are telling the company to continue using the plastic packaging. They will not change until their customers force them.

In many places, such as Montana, there are little means to recycle plastic, however “Break Free From Plastic” believes that recycling is not enough to solve the plastic pollution problem. Instead, it wants corporations to stop relying on single-use plastic,” so maybe instead of working to get plastic recycling in places like Montana, customers should refuse single-use plastic products and make corporations adapt (Bandoim).

Coca-Cola plans on making their bottles from 50% recycled material by 2030. In contrast, India plans to eliminate all single-use plastic by 2022 (Bandoim). Big Food companies should be doing more.

They are not just top global plastic polluters but also top contributors to climate change “Together, the [top] 10 [Big Food] firms emit more tons of greenhouse gases than Finland, Sweden, Denmark, and Norway combined” (“Big 10 Food”). If society does not change, Earth will no longer be a hospitable environment for the human race sooner than we would like to admit.

Some of these large companies are beginning to make the change, “Walmart promises to reduce emissions of greenhouse gases by a billion tons of carbon between now and 2030.” While these efforts are good, it is clear that “you need to engage the whole supply chain” to make a difference (“Can Anyone”). 

Deforestation has also increased dramatically with a lot of the land being cleared to growing food (“Don’t Cut”). Big Food uses this statistic to defer the blame to their suppliers, but keep in mind that the multibillion-dollar companies are creating a high demand for the abundance of food worldwide. Big Food is bringing Earth to its knees through plastic pollution, climate change, and deforestation.

The customers have the power to force change. By choosing eco-friendly businesses like Wholesome Hal’s, you are making a difference.

Works Cited

Bandoim, Lana. “Why Coca-Cola Refuses To Ban Plastic Bottles.” Forbes, Forbes Magazine, 29 Jan. 2020, www.forbes.com/sites/lanabandoim/2020/01/23/why-coca-cola-refuses-to-ban -plastic-bottles/#418ea742327b.

“Big 10 Food Companies Emit As Much As The ‘World’s 25th Most Polluting Country’.” YaleGlobal Online, 18 June 2014. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale. com/apps/doc/A371825533/OVIC?u=mtlib_2_906&sid=OVIC&xid=cb86b8d0. Accessed 28 Jan. 2020.

“Can Anyone, Even Walmart, Stem The Heat-Trapping Flood Of Nitrogen On Farms?” All Things Considered, 21 Aug. 2017. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A501957168/OVIC?u=mtlib _2_906&sid=OVIC&xid=1ad2f84d. Accessed 30 Jan. 2020.

“Don’t Cut Those Trees – Big Food Might Be Watching.” All Things Considered, 31 July 2019. Gale In Context: Opposing Viewpoints, link.gale.com/apps/doc/A596564891/OVIC? u=mtlib_2_906&sid=OVIC&xid=592696c3. Accessed 30 Jan. 2020.

“A system is corrupt when it is strictly profit-driven, not driven to serve the best interests of its people, but those of multinational corporations.”

-Suzy Kassem

Help Me Start a Mini-Revolution

As the youth and the generation of change, there is a lot of pressure on us to transform the world and create a better and brighter future. People are turning toward us to be the change we so desperately need, whether it is to create a more just society full of equal opportunities, to reverse climate change, reduce obesity rates and so much more. It is all on us.

I have embraced this pressure. I believe that change is long overdue and my generation, my peers, are the people who have the drive, the motivation, and the means to be the ones to do it. For this reason, I get so frustrated when we are not given the chance to prove it.

As a young entrepreneur, I am very grateful to have received a lot of recognition for my hard work and accomplishments. For example, this spring I was awarded the Aspire! Fire Within Award from the Great Falls Development Authority. So exciting!

However, the unfortunate truth is I run across more sceptics than I do enthusiasts. The same people who are putting this pressure on me and my generation to be the change, are looking for flaws in my business.

Some think that because I am 17 there is no way that my business is legitimate and that I could have gotten approved by the health department to sell my products. They assume starting Wholesome Hal’s was an impulsive decision and poorly thought out and therefore I won’t make it. I am oftentimes overlooked because of my age, and perhaps my tiny trailer. People tend to go with business they see as more polished.

None of this is true. I worked and reworked Wholesome Hal’s business plan over and over for 7 months before deciding that Wholesome Hal’s was not a risk, but a valid and viable idea that will not only turn a profit, but better the community of Great Falls by being a healthy and eco-friendly, healthy option at events like the Farmers Market. I have worked closely with the health department both years to make sure that I am following all the rules and am selling the highest quality food possible whether it come from a modified horse trailer or a fancy food truck. (The first day I will be selling is Monday at the corner of 25th Street and 7th Avenue South.)

I have everything that other businesses have and more. Yet some people are so quick to make judgements about me because of my age.

For those who think that Wholesome Hal’s was a huge risk that you personally would not have taken, please don’t punish me for doing a lot of research and work to create a very legitimate business. Give me the same opportunity you would give another business.

I encourage everyone to not make judgements about me or my business until you have come and personally tired it. Everyone deserves equal opportunities regardless of age, race, gender, etc.

We see changes young people are starting all over the world right now. I’d appreciate your support as I try to start my own little mini-revolution here in Great Falls as an eco-friendly business selling nutritious and delicious food.

“You were not made for comfort and convenience. You were made to overcome.”

–Cory Booker