What happens when you tell the food movement it isn’t really as big as it thinks? We called Tamar Haspel to find out. Haspel, a highly-regarded reporter who writes about food issues for the Washington Post, last week published an article that made exactly that point, arguing that the apparent support for issues like the labeling of GMOs may say more about survey techniques than about how people actually feel about food.
Haspel worked with data from William Hallman, chairman of the Department of Human Ecology at Rutgers University, who has been exploring the question by asking people their opinions about food in two different ways. On the one hand, he asks people yes or no questions: whether they think, say, GMOs should be labeled, or whether it is important to them to know where food was grown or what pesticides were used. But when he asks questions in a more open-ended fashion, the results are very different.
“Polls routinely show that, when you ask people whether they want GMOs labeled, upwards of 90 percent say yes,” Haspel wrote. “Overwhelming support for labeling GMOs! But if, instead, you ask consumers what they’d like to see identified on food labels that isn’t already there, a paltry 7 percent say ‘GMOs.’ Almost no support for labeling GMOs!”
Open-ended questions are great for certain kinds of research, but they’re a cumbersome and expensive approach because someone has to review and code every response. But closed-ended research—though lends itself to dramatic conclusions and eye-catching headlines—can be misleading. Haspel’s argument is that closed-ended questioning has led us to believe that Americans are more food-progressive than they actually are; she goes on to cite data that vegetable consumption has actually declined over the past few years and that only about 14 percent of consumers met one researcher’s criteria for belonging to the food movement.
People are never happy to hear that the battle is only begun, not won. And though the article has been widely praised and supported, Haspel has been feeling a bit of push-back. On Twitter, commenters have accused her of pro-GMO bias and of using disreputable sources in the form of Ketchum, a major PR agency. Several accused her of not paying attention to what’s going on around her, and Reuters reporter Carey Gillam tweeted “Maybe my friends, family, neighbors more savvy than @TamarHaspel ‘s? Organics, GMOs, etc. hot topics in my ‘hood.’”
“It was interesting that most of the people who said I was wrong said, ‘My family, my friends care,’” Haspel says. “People are very unclear on the difference between anecdote and data.”
And as for using Ketchum: “If you want to know what consumers really think and care about, a firm like Ketchum is who you want to hear from, because they live and die by getting it right. I repeatedly asked, ‘Do you have any data that contradicts it?’ In all the controversy, I didn’t see any contradictory data.”
Predictably, a more nuanced discussion of Haspel’s article took place on the listserv Comfood, from Tufts University. There, commenters focused on the difference between market-driven and politically driven change. Here’s one of the best analyses:
To Haspel, that’s still missing the point, at least partly: “I think if you start talking about how to solve these problems from the government down you run into all kinds of obstacles—including political feasibility in the political climate we have today. Consumer pressure, I think is the most important tool that we consumers have, because we hold the power, we have the wallet, and that’s why the size of the food movement really is important, because if it’s small and scattered, we’re not going to have the pressure to change. If you think this is government’s job to fix, then the size of consumer concern still matters.
“The idea that these things are going to get fixed in the absence of consumer concern is a pipe dream.”
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