Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for China

China is experiencing rapid urbanization, changes in diets, and modernization of food retailing and production. In this context, food safety can become a greater concern for a variety of reasons. The purpose of this article is to review the international experiences and lessons regarding food safety...

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Main Authors: L Unnevehr, V Hoffmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-11-01
Series:Journal of Integrative Agriculture
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311915611121
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spelling doaj-6a7e4ff016814799a716153cdfb762522021-06-07T06:51:13ZengElsevierJournal of Integrative Agriculture2095-31192015-11-01141122182230Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for ChinaL Unnevehr0V Hoffmann1Agricultural and Consumer Economics, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL 81601, USA; Correspondence L UnnevehrInternational Food Policy Research Institute, Washington, D.C. 20006, USAChina is experiencing rapid urbanization, changes in diets, and modernization of food retailing and production. In this context, food safety can become a greater concern for a variety of reasons. The purpose of this article is to review the international experiences and lessons regarding food safety management, regulation, and consumer behavior, with the goal of identifying how to improve food safety in middle income countries such as China. International experience in addressing food safety provides two general kinds of lessons. First, a middle-income country such as China needs to develop the capacity to carry out risk analysis in order to better focus public resources on the most important risks. Second, it will be important to leverage market incentives so as to make the best use of limited public capacity to enforce standards. International experiences show that food safety management is feasible where market incentives exist, and that public-private partnerships can support the process of improving food safety management. Market incentives require effective consumer or buyer demand, mechanisms to identify and reward quality, and supply chain coordination. Public efforts can be targeted to supporting these market developments for the risks that are the greatest burden to public health.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311915611121food safety regulationsupply chain coordinationrisk analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author L Unnevehr
V Hoffmann
spellingShingle L Unnevehr
V Hoffmann
Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for China
Journal of Integrative Agriculture
food safety regulation
supply chain coordination
risk analysis
author_facet L Unnevehr
V Hoffmann
author_sort L Unnevehr
title Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for China
title_short Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for China
title_full Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for China
title_fullStr Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for China
title_full_unstemmed Food safety management and regulation: International experiences and lessons for China
title_sort food safety management and regulation: international experiences and lessons for china
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Integrative Agriculture
issn 2095-3119
publishDate 2015-11-01
description China is experiencing rapid urbanization, changes in diets, and modernization of food retailing and production. In this context, food safety can become a greater concern for a variety of reasons. The purpose of this article is to review the international experiences and lessons regarding food safety management, regulation, and consumer behavior, with the goal of identifying how to improve food safety in middle income countries such as China. International experience in addressing food safety provides two general kinds of lessons. First, a middle-income country such as China needs to develop the capacity to carry out risk analysis in order to better focus public resources on the most important risks. Second, it will be important to leverage market incentives so as to make the best use of limited public capacity to enforce standards. International experiences show that food safety management is feasible where market incentives exist, and that public-private partnerships can support the process of improving food safety management. Market incentives require effective consumer or buyer demand, mechanisms to identify and reward quality, and supply chain coordination. Public efforts can be targeted to supporting these market developments for the risks that are the greatest burden to public health.
topic food safety regulation
supply chain coordination
risk analysis
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095311915611121
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