New research looks at how a 27-day window in which food products containing genetically engineered ingredients required labels in Vermont changed opposition to GE food.
That window has given economists insight into how the mandatory labeling could affect consumer attitudes. During the mandatory labeling period, opposition to GE foods declined nearly 19 percent.
On July 1, 2016, a Vermont law went into effect requiring labels on all foods containing genetically engineered ingredients or genetically modified organisms. But the labels were required only until July 27, 2016, when a federal law superseded it, requiring the US Department of Agriculture to determine when GE-containing foods must have labels.
“…concern about mandatory GMO labels is likely misplaced…”
The researchers gathered data on consumer attitudes toward GE foods in the months leading up to and after the law. Whereas opposition to GE foods increased slightly in the rest of the United States, it declined significantly in Vermont.
“This is really the only place in the US that has had mandatory labeling. It was a good, natural experiment to test some of these competing hypotheses about what labels would do,” says Jayson Lusk, professor and head of the agricultural economics department of Purdue University.
“One of the concerns many people, including myself, expressed about mandating GMO labels is that consumers might see the label as a type of warning signal and increase aversion to the label. This research shows that this particular concern about mandatory GMO labels is likely misplaced,” Lusk says.
Jane Kolodinsky, professor and chair in the department of community development and applied economics at the University of Vermont, surveyed Vermont residents to rate their level of support for GE foods on a one-to-five scale, with one being very supportive and five being very opposed. Lusk has long collected monthly data on consumer food issues for the entire United States. In those surveys, consumers also used a one-to-five scale, with one being very unconcerned about GE foods and five being very concerned.
Despite the difference in the questions, Lusk and Kolodinsky could compare each data set to see how attitudes changed in either Vermont or the country as a whole.
“Our findings show that simple disclosure labels will not scare consumers away,” Kolodinsky says. “We show that labels, like the ones implemented in Vermont, can actually improve attitudes toward food with genetically engineered ingredients. That these results occurred in a traditional hot bed of GMO opposition is striking.”
Before the July 2016 Vermont labeling law went into effect, concern in the US over GE foods averaged 3.156, or slightly more concerned than not. After the law, the concern index increased to 3.23.
In Vermont, the average resident before the law took effect gave GE foods a support score of 3.597, closer to the opposed end of the scale. After July, that dropped to 3.077.
Models using data collected before the law went into effect predicted that people in Vermont would be slightly less supportive of GE foods had the label law not been enacted. Those models predicted the average Vermont consumer after July 2016 would have a support score of 3.671.
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Comparing the expected support to actual, Vermont opposition for GE foods declined about 19 percent.
It isn’t clear why consumers would become more supportive of GE foods after the law, but Lusk thinks it might have to do with seeing the labels on brands consumers already trust.
“Companies have spent billions of dollars on advertising and building trust in their brands,” Lusk says. “I can imagine a consumer sees a brand they’ve come to enjoy or trust with this label and they think ‘if genetically engineered ingredients are OK with them, then it’s OK with me.'”
The USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture, the Willard Sparks Chair at Oklahoma State University, and the Purdue University College of Agriculture supported this research.
The research appears in the journal Science Advances.
Source: Purdue University