by Torchwood » Wed Aug 25, 2010 10:48 pm
The US is relatively weak compared to other civilised countries on farm animal welfare laws, but then you did take an awful long time to get rid of human slavery - and factory farming is an abomination comparable to this (mark you, the US never took practices to the point which caused mad cow disease in the UK).
The EU is to outlaw battery cages for hens by 2012, although the new minimum standard is still not free range - Germany is going further.
I only buy free range eggs - widely available in supermarkets - and the premium to ordinary eggs has declined substantially. For free range chicken or pork, the premium is still quite large but less than it was. If you care about animal welfare, beef or lamb is best, and veal is a no-no. But consumer power can only do so much - will you stop restaurant meals or buying cakes? Very doubtful if the meat or eggs are free range.
One has to press to outlaw factory farming. Proposing to increase the price of food in a recession, great, that will be popular. But health and safety and minimum working standards add to costs, there are more important things some time. The high cost of free range food is because of higher margins as retailer see it as a market of middle class do-gooding suckers. Those margins come down if legislation is enforced.
Pessimism is the soft option.