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EXTRACT: "If a company can get enough farmers to support the product and they
write letters, then the USDA is going to listen to that and say, 'We have to
keep our stakeholders happy,'" says Hiatt.

NOTE: This article details research that identifies corporate capture of the
regulatory system via key third party groups. Among these for the US Department
of Agriculture are farmers' groups, which makes sense of the enormous lengths
that companies like Monsanto go to to cultivate these organisations and,
relatedly, the farm media.

The biotech industry enjoys a very close relationship with the American Soybean
Association, for example, to which it has contributed millions of dollars. And
the ASA, in turn, has spent significant sums working with the biotech industry
front group, the Council for Biotechnology Information, and the National Corn
Growers Association (NCGA) to achieve "a unified message about the benefits of
transgenic crops." http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/American_Soybean_Association
http://www.powerbase.info/index.php/National_Corn_Growers_Association

This article says that the researchers found a "strong influence of farmers
associations, such as the Iowa Soybean Association or the Kansas Corn Growers
Association". These are state affiliates of the ASA and the NCGA. The NCGA even
has its national office in St Louis, Monsanto's home town.
---
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Who Sways the USDA on GMO Approvals?
Michael Blanding
Working Knowledge - Harvard Business School, April 9 2012
http://hbswk.hbs.edu/item/6959.html

Executive Summary:

Government agencies can be "captured" by the very companies or industries they
regulate. Looking at how genetically altered food products are approved,
Assistant Professor Shon R. Hiatt finds unexpected influencers on the US
Department of Agriculture. Key concepts include:

"Regulatory capture" describes the phenomenon whereby regulatory agencies tasked
with serving the public instead end up advancing the interests of the companies
they regulate.

Traditional theories of capture such as lobbying and campaign contributions had
little effect on whether the US Department of Agriculture approved any
particular genetically altered agriculture product.

What did seem to affect the approval process was the influence of third-party
groups such as associations and even related regulatory agencies.

[main article]
Many corporations have gotten good at pulling the levers of government to tilt
the odds in their favor, weakening regulations or securing perks, justified or
not, to further their business interests. Economists use the term "regulatory
capture" to describe the phenomenon whereby regulatory agencies serving the
public instead end up advancing the interests of the companies they regulate.
The main way companies accomplish this, economists theorize, is through lobbying
and campaign contributions that convince legislators to pass laws in their
favor.

Once those laws are passed, however, it's less clear how companies sway the
regulatory agencies that enforce them, which are more isolated from the direct
effects of money or persuasion.

"Traditional theories of regulatory capture cannot be used the same on
agencies," contends Shon R. Hiatt, an assistant professor at Harvard Business
School. "There are a lot of checks and balances and firewalls in place."

So how are these agencies influenced?

Hiatt, who grew up on a dairy farm in Idaho, began asking that question through
research on the controversial issue of genetically modified organisms (GMOs),
agricultural products that are genetically altered to increase yield,
incorporate pesticide properties, or exhibit other beneficial qualities.
(Calgene's Flavr Savr tomato was the first genetically modified product to come
to market, in 1992.) However, the organisms also potentially carry health and
environmental risks. After reading about these dangers, Hiatt wondered how the
US Department of Agriculture (USDA) decides which GMOs to approve - and how
agribusiness influences the process.

Traditional theories break down

As Hiatt began investigating, he found that traditional theories of capture such
as lobbying and campaign contributions had little effect on whether any
particular GMO was approved. Even more direct means of influence such as
scientific articles funded by industry or letters written by industry-friendly
congresspeople were equally ineffective.

What did seem to affect the approval process, however, was the influence of
third-party groups separate from Congress and industry, to which the department
looked to justify its decisions.

We may think the primary goal of agencies such as the USDA is to protect public
health and safety; based on previous economic theory, however, Hiatt started
with a different assumption - the primary goal of an agency is really to protect
its own legitimacy. After all, it's the perception of an agency's effectiveness
by Congress and the White House that will determine its budget and the career
trajectory of its top officials. Of course, there is an overlap between the
appearance of doing a good job and actually doing one. "If the USDA weren't
doing its job, it would have very little legitimacy," says Hiatt. But that
subtle difference in perspective also has the potential to distort the agency's
reliance on pure science in its approval of GMOs.

In his working paper "Lords of the Harvest: Third-Party Signaling and Regulatory
Approval of Genetically Modified Organisms, written with Sangchan Park, an
assistant professor at the National University of Singapore, Hiatt identifies
two types of legitimacy important to the USDA. The first, "consequential"
legitimacy, is the perception that the process produces effective results; the
second, "procedural" legitimacy, is the perception that it is fairly following
the rules of the process.

In both cases, the researchers found that the department looked to outside
stakeholders in order to establish that legitimacy.

In the case of consequential legitimacy, Hiatt and Park found a strong influence
of farmers associations, such as the Iowa Soybean Association or the Kansas Corn
Growers Association, which have the power to judge whether the GMOs are
performing as intended without side effects. While these groups might have some
industry members, they are separate from the agribusiness companies that are
introducing GMOs. In cases where they supported a particular organism, there was
an 84 percent increase in the likelihood of approval.

"If a company can get enough farmers to support the product and they write
letters, then the USDA is going to listen to that and say, 'We have to keep our
stakeholders happy,'" says Hiatt.

Other agencies influence approvals

In the case of procedural legitimacy, the researchers found a strong influence
from an unlikely source-the USDA's sister agency, the Food and Drug
Administration. In the process of approving GMOs, companies have the option of
consulting with the FDA to design nutritional labels for their products, earning
a certificate of approval when they address FDA concerns. "They get these
consultations and they are somewhat meaningless-they have little to do with the
USDA approval process," says Hiatt.

Regardless of that fact, however, Hiatt and Park found that a positive
endorsement by the FDA had a huge effect on USDA approval, increasing the
likelihood by 157 percent.

Hiatt hypothesizes that in addition to receiving nutritional information on the
GMOs, getting the green light from another agency might help insulate the
department from criticism. "The USDA could be looking for a scapegoat," he
speculates. "A positive signal from a fellow bureaucratic actor could diffuse
the blame and provide political cover were the department to approve a faulty
product."

These effects seemed to be even higher during instances where there was
significant controversy or uncertainty. In cases where there were protests by
activists over a particular GMO, the researchers found that the overall
percentage of approvals went down, but the degree to which a positive
endorsement by farmers associations increased the likelihood of approval by117
percent.

Results were even starker during a congressional election year, in which a
heightened political environment presumably casts more scrutiny on agency
decisions.

In those cases, farmers associations' influence increased the likelihood of
approval by a whopping 400 percent. In addition to increasing the likelihood of
approval, says Hiatt, third-party endorsements shorten the approval period. With
farmers' approval, agricultural companies shaved about 162 days off the average
approval time; with FDA consultation, they cut it down by about 257 days. That
can translate to big bucks for companies.

"The average seed company earns about $2 million per day of revenue for high-
selling GMO crops such as soybeans," notes Hiatt. "That's a substantial amount."

He stresses that these findings only concern the USDA, and only GMO approval;
more research is necessary to determine whether the effect of third-party
stakeholders on the USDA has an effect on other agencies or other policy issues.
Conceivably, the same findings could hold true for other agencies: for example,
the influence of doctors associations on the FDA drug approval process or
consumer bureaus on rate increases by public utilities commissions.
Regulators must recognize influencers

To the degree these third-party stakeholders do have influence, it complicates
the traditional models of regulatory capture. On the one hand, it is perhaps a
relief for democracy if companies don't have such direct influence on the
process. On the other, it opens up the possibility that firms could capture
these third-party actors instead-for example, drug companies influencing doctors
with incentives for prescribing drugs or sponsoring medical conferences.

Perhaps the larger lessons from Hiatt and Park's research, however, concern
regulators themselves. It's important that agencies such as the USDA realize
their susceptibility to these outside influences, less they short-circuit their
reliance on scientific procedures. That is just what happened with the approval
of GMO alfalfa and sugar beets: both received positive signals from farmers and
the FDA, and were approved by the USDA. But environmental groups protested that
these products were approved without a full environmental review, successfully
suing to take them off the market. (Alfalfa was subsequently reapproved after a
multi-year delay. Sugar beets are still pending approval.)

"Regulators need to be aware of the influence they are putting on these
stakeholders and other regulatory agencies," says Hiatt. "In those cases, it's
even more important they follow the same scientific procedures they usually do.
If they find themselves cutting corners, they could run into problems."

About the author

Boston-based writer Michael Blanding is a fellow at the Edmond J. Safra Center
for Ethics at Harvard University and author of The Coke Machine: The Dirty Truth
Behind the World's Favorite Soft Drink.

About Faculty in this Article: HBS Faculty Member, Shon R. Hiatt. Shon R. Hiatt
is assistant professor of business administration in the Organizational Behavior
unit at Harvard Business School.


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Website: http://www.gmwatch.org
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