We challenge the assumptions that limit progress – interrogating the political and economic structures that shape our food systems and identifying the levers for transformative change.
So far, we have produced a number of reports that unpack the political economy of food and farming. These have generated significant media coverage and been cited by politicians in parliament. We also focus attention on the real economy – the material and foundational elements of prosperous communities, with real impact on people’s everyday lives.
This report by Professor Tim Jackson provides the first comprehensive estimate of the food-related cost of chronic disease, caused by the current food system. The analysis combines direct costs – the costs paid for from the public purse – including healthcare costs, social care costs and welfare, and indirect costs – costs that don’t show up in government accounts – which are productivity losses and human costs.
It finds that the costs of Britain’s unhealthy food system amount to £268 billion every year – almost equivalent to the total annual UK healthcare spend – and makes the case for a new food economy.
Britain’s food has been cheapened for decades. In the push to produce low-cost calories, farmers’ incomes have stagnated, a small number of companies now dominate Britain’s food chain, and immense costs to people’s health and nature have piled up. In a volatile world facing the effects of climate change and turbulent politics, the country’s long-term food security is at risk.
This report turns to the farmers and the food chain that keep Britain fed – and seeks to answer three simple questions. Why have farmers felt squeezed by the push for cheaper food at all costs? Why is this a problem? And what should be done?
A common claim from big food companies is that they contribute to the economy: through jobs, investment and growth. But is this the full picture?
This new and significant piece of work starts the process of investigating the real costs and benefits of the businesses that dominate our food system. Building on The Food Conversation, it proposes a new value framework and sets out to identify a creative, impactful and feasible way to assess the performance of the whole UK agri-food system, its constituent sectors, and the contributions of the most dominant corporations within it.