As food prices
continue to rise for families across the country, a new study from
Cornell University last week revealed that New York’s proposed mandatory
GMO labeling bill would cost families an average of $500 per year at
the checkout aisle.
The study comes on the heels of similar studies in
Washington state and California that showed mandatory GMO labels would
result in similar increases in the cost of food.
“American families deserve safe, abundant
and affordable food,” said Claire Parker, spokeswoman for the Coalition
for Safe and Affordable Food.
“GMOs have been used in our food supply
for more than 20 years and no study has ever shown them to be unsafe or
different from foods without GMOs. Repeated studies, however, have shown
that the high cost of mandatory labeling would dramatically increase
the price of groceries at the checkout aisle for consumers. A mandatory
GMO label will just make it more difficult and expensive for
hard-working American families to put food on the table,” she said.
The study, released last week,
found that families forced to buy organic food instead of conventional
foods containing GMOs could see their food prices increase as much as
$1,556 per family per year. Similarly, such a mandatory labeling law
would likely cost the state of New York millions of dollars in revenue
to implement the new requirements and to account for a loss in farm
income.
Earlier, the US Bureau of
Labor Statistics announced that April was the third consecutive month
that American families saw an increase in food prices, rising a total of
3.9 percent since January.
The study was conducted by Professor Bill
Lesser from the Dyson School of Applied Economics and Management at
Cornell University to evaluate the added costs that will be passed on to
consumers if mandatory labeling becomes law in New York.
For more information, visit www.cfsaf.org.
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