Reviving an effort made nearly 20 years ago by Paul Wellstone, the late Democratic senator from Minnesota, U.S. Senator Cory Booker (D-N.J.) introduced legislation on Tuesday that would put a check on “the ever-increasing levels of corporate concentration” in the food system.
S.3404, “The Food and Agribusiness Merger Moratorium and Antitrust Review Act of 2018,” is backed by organizations including ActionAid USA, Farm Aid, the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy, and the National Farmers Union, and would put an 18-month pause on large agribusiness, food and beverage manufacturing, and grocery retail mergers, and also establish a 12-member commission tasked with probing the causes and effects of such concentration and suggesting regulation to ensure fairness of competition in the market.
“Consolidation has now reached a point where the top four firms in almost every sector of the food and agriculture economy have acquired abusive levels of market power,” Booker said in a press statement Wednesday. “As a result, the U.S. is losing farmers at an alarming rate, agricultural jobs and wages are drying up, and rural communities are disappearing.”
Wenonah Hauter, executive director of Food & Water Watch, hailed the measure as “groundbreaking” and “a crucial step to busting up the ‘Foodopoly’ in which a handful of players drive food policy in the service of Wall Street, not Main Street.”
The bill illustrates some of the factors that “are driving small family farmers out of business.” As noted in the text:
- In the past three decades, the top 4 largest pork packers have seized control of 71 percent of the market, up from 36 percent. Over the same period, the top 4 beef packers have expanded their market share from 32 percent to 85 percent
- The top 4 grain companies today control 4 nearly 90 percent of the global grain trade.
- During the past 2 years there has been a wave of consolidation among global seed and crop-chemical firms, 3 companies now control nearly 2 ⁄ 3 of the world’s commodity crop seeds. Those same 3 companies now also control nearly 70 percent of all agricultural chemicals and pesticides.
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