Why do we waste so much food?

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  • Social brain

While minding my own business yesterday I received an unexpected call asking me to appear on The Today Programme to discuss the psychological underpinnings of why we waste so much food. They chose me with my Social Brain hat on, because they wanted to explore wider issues relating to people acting against their own self-interest and the nature of irrationality.

This is my fourth time on the show, and in my experience, the off air conversation with the producer- who is basically checking you out- is invariably much deeper and longer than the conversation with the presenter. When the programme says there will be five minutes, that usually means 1 minute for the presenter, 2 for the other guest(in this case, Angie Hobbs) and 2 minutes to say what you can about the subject, in the context of the questions and answers already given.

The snippet is here, at about 8.55am, squeezed into the end of the show, and you can judge for yourself whether they were minutes well spent (or indeed whether such an important discussion might have been more worthy of minutes than some of the items earlier in the show).

My main point was that our perception of waste is relative to our experience of scarcity, and for most of us, things like water, food and energy do not feel scarce, even though, taken globally, they are. In so far as there is a solution, it may lie in simulating the experience of scarcity. I do this incidentally once a year when I visit my in-laws in India, where I learn to live with water shortages and power cuts, even in a relatively developed and affluent part of one of their main cities, Bangalore.

My main point was that our perception of waste is relative to our experience of scarcity

Now that I have a little more time than I did on air, here are some of the things that weren't mentioned.

  • The problem is global, multifaceted and systemic. It's not just about the behaviour of people in the developed world, or indeed supermarket offers. The problem includes regulation, the storage and transport of food, irregular harvests, and much else besides.
  • The headlines said we waste half our food, but that's a bit overblown. In the report they say the estimate is that we waste between 30-50% of our food.
  • When Evan Davis told his bear story, I wish I had said: "Humans are animals, but we are not bears, and unlike bears we have a moral responsibility towards the rest of our species and the planet as a whole."

Spending money on sales is still spending, not saving.

There are lots of behavioural/psychological issues that are important, including:

  • Spending money on sales is still spending, not saving.
  • Anticipated regret- the tendency to do something now in case we regret not having had done it at a future point - is relevant in three ways; 1) We want to stockpile food in case we run out 2)We want to buy the sale items in case we don't get another such offer 3)We trust the sell-buy date more than our own senses.
  • Is there a place for smaller shopping trolleys? Given the evidence that we tend to eat and buy less/more depending on the size of the recepticle, it seems intuitive that we might buy and waste less if we had smaller spaces to fill.

There are many more dimensions to this problem, and an excellent overview, including a detailed breakdown of the reasons we waste food can be found (in a table!) here:

A small but particularly painful part of the problem is that we don't seem to know what to do with our food items, or our leftovers so...

  • Should we place renewed educational emphasis on home economics?
  • No? Sounds absurd given the scale of the challenge?
  • Then what should we do? Where should we start?

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3 Comments

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  • Useful to look at the co-relations between advertising and food consumption. We are constantly advertised at, to want more, especially food. Oliver James talks about Affluenza, the constant hunger that leaves us feeling empty. Unthinkable not to have a coffee ( and a cake) on the way into town, and if you go into a supermarket before a meal you'll buy more. Yet It is impossible to buy small amounts in the supermarket. We are being conditioned to buy, to eat, to graze, leading to two problem, obesity because of the poor quality (think chalk filled bread), and waste, since we over buy.

  • Jonathon I shop at the market. they don't have shopping trollies small or other, and its what I can carry in my canvas bags on the bus or train.Tesco is working hard at undercutting this market whihc has been there since 1276, and Sainsbury has a convenience across the road just opened. Regenrate the high street.!

  • I have a pathological hatred of throwing food away that was hard wired into my brain by my parents, who as children grew up during and after the second world war and food rationing. I pay very little attention to use by dates and would rather salvage food that is a bit past it by cutting off rotten or mouldy bits instead of throwing it away.

    I take pleasure in thinking up meals that use up the food in the fridge imaginatively instead of buying new stuff. We do our family shop online which is great for keeping impulse buying under control. We use mysupermarket.co.uk to compare prices across supermarkets and do a big shop once a month, topping up milk and bread in between.

    Very little food other than peelings goes into the bin in our house!

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