What’s behind America’s baby formula shortage?

What’s behind America’s baby formula shortage?
What’s behind America’s baby formula shortage?

Bare shelves. Hungry babies. Desperate parents.

The United States is experiencing a nationwide shortage of baby formula, threatening the health of millions of infants and giving an already-unpopular President Biden yet another headache ahead of November’s midterm elections.

According to Datasembly, 43% of formula in the country is currently out of stock—up from 30% in April and under 5% in the first half of 2021.

Three in four American babies six months and younger rely at least partially on formula for sustenance. Nearly 20% of infants receive formula within two days of being born. Children of low-income parents and people of color are disproportionately dependent on formula, as are babies with digestive disorders or specialized nutritional needs.

The worsening shortage has led worried parents to hoard what little formula they are able to find, exacerbating the crunch and prompting retailers to ration supplies by limiting purchases.

Want to understand the world a little better? Subscribe to GZERO Daily by Ian Bremmer for free and get new posts delivered to your inbox every week.

Not surprisingly given our extraordinarily polarized political environment, the episode has drawncomparisons to the bread lines and rationing the Soviet Union experienced just before its collapse. Republicans are blaming the Biden administration for both causing and failing to solve the shortage, conflating it with other consumer goods shortages, rising inflation, high gas prices, and the border crisis.

In reality, the challenges trace back to 2020, as Covid-19 strained global supply chains and disrupted virtually all industries and products—from lumber and coffee to toilet paper, gym equipment, and cars. Early in the pandemic parents rushed to stockpile formula, fearing shortages. Demand fell as they worked through their reserves, prompting suppliers to reduce production. By mid-2021, demand for formula had recovered, but producers were struggling to expand manufacturing capacity enough to keep up due to bottlenecks along every supply chain. As a result, the nationwide out-of-stock rate shot up from under 5% in the first half of 2021 to above 10% between August and December.

But the shortage didn’t begin in earnest until February 2022, when Abbott Nutrition—America’s largest formula manufacturer—issued a voluntary recall of certain formula products after suspected contamination in its Sturgis, Michigan plant was linked to the hospitalization of four infants, two of whom died. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) ordered the Sturgis facility to shut down while it conducted an investigation, and the plant has remained closed ever since. While the FDA and Abbott agreed on May 16 to reopen the Michigan factory, parents will have to wait up to 2 months for formula to be back on shelves.

Bad policies to blame

The Abbott recalls and plant closure took a substantial chunk of the U.S. formula supply offline, at a time when the market was already stretched thin by pandemic-induced supply chain constraints. But product recalls happen all the time, and rarely do they cause national emergencies of this caliber.

Why did the recall of a single company’s products and the shutdown of a single factory cause the entire U.S. formula market to collapse?

Policy-induced market concentration. The U.S. government is the largest purchaser of infant formula in the country, accounting for about half of all sales in the country. It does so through WIC (formally known as USDA’s Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children), a federal welfare program that provides vouchers for low-income families to buy heavily subsidized food, including free formula. WIC feeds more than 1.2 million infants each year. The catch? In order to obtain discounted prices, WIC awards exclusivity contracts to a small number of approved formula manufacturers, and recipients are only able to use the benefit to buy designated types, sizes, and brands of formula.

This program design has resulted in a highly concentrated domestic industry, with nearly all formula sold in the U.S. produced by only three major companies: Abbott, Mead Johnson, and Gerber—the WIC suppliers. Abbott alone provides about half of the formula given to WIC recipients and about 40% of the total domestic supply. Before February, its Sturgis plant accounted for more than half of the company’s total formula production. It is no wonder, then, that the combination of recalls, the Sturgis closure, and the pandemic shock have managed to stretch the domestic industry even though all manufacturers are operating at full capacity.

Overzealous regulations. One way to increase the supply of formula at a time when domestic production can’t keep up with demand is to import more from overseas. However, the FDA’s regulation of infant formula is so nonsensically stringent that the vast majority of formula produced abroad is illegal to trade in the United States—not because it’s unsafe, but because it doesn’t meet the FDA’s onerous and often arbitrary labeling and nutritional requirements. In fact, the FDA bans the sale of formulas that have been approved by foreign regulatory agencies that the FDA itself rates as comparably capable. That includes most formulas from Europe, the largest global exporter of the product, even though studies have shown that they not only comply with FDA nutritional guidelines but also they are better than most American formulas because they don’t use corn syrup and have a higher share of lactose.

Gerald Butts, vice chairman of Eurasia Group and formerly Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s chief political advisor, has argued that Big Dairy lobbying and regulatory capture are largely responsible for this state of affairs (though unclear if you can trust him: he’s Canadian).

The result? Only 2% of America’s formula supply is imported.

Protectionist policies. In addition to the FDA’s overly stringent requirements, which act as a non-tariff import barrier, U.S. trade policy explicitly restricts formula imports to shield domestic suppliers from competition. The U.S.-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), negotiated under President Trump to replace the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), imposes penalties on Canadian formula exports not just to the U.S. but to the whole world. What little foreign formula does manage to meet FDA requirements gets taxed at rates exceeding 17%, making it costly to expand the availability of formula when domestic production is stretched thin.

The current crisis is proof that trying to make everything at home can make the economy more vulnerable rather than more resilient, at the expense of American consumers. Contrary to politicians of both parties who rail against globalization and argue that “Made in America” equals “America First,” protectionist policies like tariffs, onshoring mandates, and federal procurement rules (“Buy American”) don’t make supply chains stronger. That’s not to say that unfettered, cost-minimizing offshoring is better. Economic security is all about design: geographic diversification, competition (both foreign and domestic), redundancies, and slack are all key to building flexible and resilient supply chains. But there is no inherent tradeoff between free trade and economic security, despite what the likes of Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Mo.) might claim.

The combination of high domestic market concentration, overzealous regulations, and protectionism induces artificial scarcity by depressing the supply of formula.

A product of special interest capture, economic nationalism, and well-intentioned but naïve policymaking, these long-standing bipartisan failures have made the U.S. formula market vulnerable to shocks like the Abbott recall and plant closure and the pandemic-induced supply snarls.

American babies are paying the price.


🔔 And if you haven't already, don't forget to subscribe to my free newsletter, GZERO Daily by Ian Bremmer, to get new posts delivered to your inbox.

More from GZERO Media

People gather ahead of a march to the parliament in protest of the Treaty Principles Bill, in Wellington, New Zealand, November 19, 2024.
REUTERS/Lucy Craymer

Over the past few days you might have seen that viral clip of New Zealand lawmakers interrupting a legislative session with a haka -- the foot-stamping, tongue-wagging, eyes-bulging, loud-chanting ceremonial dance of the nation’s indigenous Maori communities.

FILE PHOTO: Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Republican presidential candidate and former U.S. President Donald Trump greet each other at a campaign event sponsored by conservative group Turning Point USA, in Duluth, Georgia, U.S., October 23, 2024.
REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo/File Photo

With world leaders descending upon Brazil this week for the annual G20 summit, the specter of Donald Trump’s return looms all around.

U.S. Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump holds a copy of the Wall Street Journal while speaking at a Trump for President campaign rally at the Jacksonsville Landing in Jacksonville, Florida.
REUTERS

Donald Trump won the White House on a promise to turn around the US economy. Now, he’s struggling to appoint a lieutenant to tackle the job.

A ragpicker searches for garbage as he walks through railway tracks on a smoggy morning in New Delhi, India on November 4, 2023.

(Photo by Kabir Jhangiani/NurPhoto)

50: Particulate matter in the air over Delhi reached 50 times the safe level on Monday, causing the Indian government to close schools, halt construction, and bar certain trucks from entering the capital.

U.S. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin poses with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr during a courtesy call at the Malacanang Palace in Manila, Philippines, November 18, 2024.
Gerard Carreon/Pool via REUTERS

Manila’s top defense official Gilberto Teodoro signed a treaty with the US on Monday that will allow the Philippines to access more closely-held military intelligence and purchase more advanced technology to defend itself from China.

- YouTube

Ian Bremmer's Quick Take: From China to Canada, the world is gearing up for significant strategic shifts under Donald Trump's administration. According to Ian Bremmer, countries are eager to avoid crosswires with the US. In this Quick Take, Ian explains how these geopolitical moves are unfolding.

United States President Joe Biden, right, and US President-elect Donald Trump during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC, US, on Wednesday, November 13, 2024.
Reuters

President-elect Donald Trump, who’s expressed opposition to continued US aid to Kyiv, wants to quickly end the war in Ukraine and could pump the brakes on this policy shift once in office.

- YouTube

On GZERO World, Ian Bremmer sits down with Jennifer Sciubba to explore a looming global crisis: population collapse. With fertility rates below replacement levels in two-thirds of the world, what does this mean for the future of work, healthcare, and retirement systems? In the US, Vice President-Elect JD Vance and Elon Musk are already sounding the alarm, the latter saying it's “a much bigger risk” to civilization than global warming. Can governments do anything to stop it?

Senegal's Presidential Bassirou Diomaye Faye casts his ballot during the early legislative election, at a polling station in Ndiaganiao, Mbour, Senegal on Nov. 17, 2024.

Abdou Karim Ndoye/Senegal's Presidency/Handout via Reuters

President Bassirou Diomaye Faye called the snap vote eight months after taking office, seeking a majority mandate for economic reforms as the country grapples with high inflation and widespread unemployment.