Abstract

Background: Globalised and industrialised food systems contribute to human and planetary health challenges, such as food insecurity, malnutrition, and climate change. International trade and investment can serve as a barrier or enabler to food system transformations that would improve health and environmental outcomes. Methods: This article used health impact assessment (HIA) to analyse what we know, what we don’t know, and what we don’t know we don’t know about the role that trade and investment might play in food system transformations to improve human and planetary health. Results: Evidence exists for the link between trade and investment and the spread of unhealthy food commodities, efforts to impede nutrition labelling, and increased concentration of ultra-processed food and beverage product companies. The role of trade and investment in the reduction of animal sources in human diets is emerging and may include challenging measures that restrict the use of terms like ‘milk’ and ‘burger’ in plant-based alternatives and the promotion of plant-based foods through non-tariff barriers and targeted efforts at regulatory harmonisation. Trade disputes may serve as the forum for battles around state discrepancies in the safety and acceptability of technological innovation in the food supply, as was the case with hormone treated beef between the European Union (EU) and the United States. Corporate social responsibility (CSR) obligations are unambitious but represent welcome progress in balancing public and private interests. Finally, introducing greater policy flexibility, transparency, and participation provides opportunities to shape a modern trade and investment system that can respond to future food system challenges in a timely fashion. Conclusion: Research at the intersection of trade and investment and food systems should address emergent food systems issues, particularly those that intersect health and climate, while policy efforts should be future-proofing the flexibility of the trade and investment system to enable food system design that supports improved human and planetary health outcomes.

Highlights

  • Food systems, in their current globalised and industrialised form, are a key contributor to a number of complex human and planetary health challenges

  • Trade and Food Systems: What We Know Ultra-processed Food and Beverage Products Trade and investment has been documented as a structural driver for increased production, supply and consumption of unhealthy commodities through a number of pathways.[6,10,11]

  • Studies have revealed an increase in the supply and consumption of caloric sweeteners, namely high-fructose corn syrup, in Canada following tariff reductions in the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) between the United States, Canada and Mexico.[18]

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Summary

Introduction

In their current globalised and industrialised form, are a key contributor to a number of complex human and planetary health challenges. Agreements on the terms of trade and investment between states aim to increase the flow of goods, services, and capital across borders. This goal is achieved in many ways, such as: reducing the taxes applied to foreign imports at the border (ie, tariffs) to increase their ability to compete with domestic products; opening new sectors of a domestic economy to foreign investment, or increasing the percentage of foreign ownership allowable within an industry, such that foreign nationals can own a controlling stake in a domestic company; or through processes of regulatory coherence, whereby standards, rules and procedures are harmonised across countries and greater transparency and participation is enshrined in the domestic policy-making process as a part of international obligations. Unlike many international treaties pertaining to human health or the environment, trade and investment agreements have embedded enforcement procedures and financial penalties for noncompliance through dispute settlement, either

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