FDA

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FDA was created because of a propaganda scam (The Jungle), to cure problems that barely existed, and they made worse.
FDA (Food and Drug Administration) was created because of a propaganda scam (Upton Sinclair's debunked, "The Jungle") that said we need corrupt food inspections. The agency fails at inspections, delays life saving drugs, treatments and devices by a decade (while people die), and they drive up their costs and reduce competition. Is it really worth it?
ℹ️ Info          
~ Aristotle Sabouni
Created: 2003-08-07 
🗒️ Note:
Government - I'm not someone who thinks the government is all bad, nor is it all good. Controlling something through government replaces a commerce based process (free market) and people's ability to vote with their wallet, with a political process where the people get less control and more bureaucracy. But the help is seen, the harm is unseed, so many think of it as a net win.
Left Right
The FDA is this great and noble institution that protects our food and drugs from anarchy, quackery and food poisoning. While the excuse is not in dispute, the reality (lie of omission) is whether it does a good job at any of those things, and whether it is worth the costs compared to the better alternatives.

The Jungle[edit source]

           Main article: The Jungle

The Jungle was a propaganda scam, written by a kook, debunked at the time by the Neill-Reynolds Report... but it gave progressive politicians an excuse to corrupt food inspections. It has done little for food quality that wasn't being done without it. Today the agency (FDA) fails at food inspections, and delays life-saving drugs, treatments, and devices by a decade (while people die waiting), and they drive up their costs and reduce competition. Is it really worth it?

While "The Jungle" was thoroughly debunked as exaggerated propaganda, it became required reading in most schools to this day. Since the truth was always far less important to the progressives than telling the fictions they wanted to sell the gullible voters. so everything Upton wrote after that got the lavish support and accolated of the socialists and progressives, despite being factually wrong.

History[edit | edit source]

We created a federal bureaucracy, under a false premise, to promote crony capitalism. The results are that there's few benefits for the FDA to be efficient, and a lot of risks. They don't get held accountable for blocking or delaying drugs, only for drugs that might have some extremely rare tertiary consequences in a small fraction of the people taking them. So they cause many to suffer (or possibly die), to protect the 1% from something unlikely, because that's what's politically expedient.

Thus, the system is a net loss. It is the TSA of Food and Drug protection. I developed medical instruments for 6 years full time (about 9 years total with consulting gigs). While I was more in the instrumentation side than the drug side, I saw many cases where they were costing us lives, patient risks, and hurting at least as much as helping. So while the FDA saves a few lives, it costs many more.

That's before looking at the opportunity costs of capital. Figure it's 10x more expensive to develop a drug in the U.S. because of the FDA (that's conservative). Now figure out how many more drugs/treatments/services would be developed, how much more competition we'd have (and thus lower margins), and all the life savings procedures because of those things keeping us safe. (Not to mention all the corruption, abuse, and false senses of security that didn't materialize), because of the FDA. That's economics.

Balances[edit | edit source]

Look, we all know the good the FDA does. It focuses on Food and Drugs. Trying to reduce bad foods that can make people sick, and reduce quackery, medicine men and snake oil salesmen from selling false cures. But again, the key to both is accountability and balances.

There's no doubt that a bureaucracy can get out of control and create more waste/harm than it helps. If you don't believe that, then stop reading now, go away, and read some far left ThinkProgress or DailyWorker delusion, because my articles will only annoy you (and vice versa). So to me, the question isn't whether bureaucracies aren't occasionally out of balance -- it's whether this one is, and how can we get it more in balance?

Here's some facts:

The FDA's budget has gone from:

  • $1.5M in 1930 (when created) to >$5B today - inflation adjusted it would be $15.14M
  • $1B in 2000, to >$5B today - inflation adjusted would only be $1.468 Billion.

The FDA's headcount has gone from:

  • <400 in 1930 (when created) to >17,468 today - inflation adjusted it would be ≈5654
  • ≈7,700 in 2000 to >17,468 today - inflation adjusted it would be ≈11,319

So FDA growth has far exceeded inflation. Is it really doing 333x as much as it was in 1930, or >3x as much as in 2000? If it isn't, then the budget is not in line with output/expectations. And if it is, that's a testament to scope creep -- it was certainly never promised when created that it would become this big a behemoth. [1]

🗒️ Note:
Government - There is this leftist fallacy that, "If we don't continue this disastrous failing program, why then you want NOTHING? OMG! Anarchy? Dog's and Cat's living together? Oh the humanity". Of course that's stupid. (No offense). Because:
  • (a) even if it was true, it wouldn't make this failing system any better
  • (b) it's not true, there's lots of ways to solve a problem, we picked the worst way (a socialist/centralized/politicized boondoggle).
  • (c) even if I wanted to eliminate it, you need to look at what would happen -- companies would figure out ways to secure their own quality to the public. Have you ever heard of the UL (Underwriters Laboratory) to guarantee electronic goods safety? ICANN for managing Internet Addresses? The IIHS (Insurance Institute for Highway Safety) that does you car safety ratings? Oh yeah, they're private / not-for-profit organization. Without government, corporations create these things anyways (and better), because consumer confidence helps sales.

So the false choice is:

  • (a) the government does it
  • (b) nobody does it

The real world choice is:

  • (a) the government does it poorly, for more costs, wastes and bureaucracy and based on politics
  • (b) the private sector would do it, only for less costs and more value, and improve over time more than the politically driven government solution

Food[edit | edit source]

So while the FDA's budget for inspections has gone up astronomically, how has their results? How many things are they catching and preventing, and how many are getting through their process? That's how they should be rated.

It appears to be a little less than 1 recall per day[2]. And many of those recalls look pretty unnecessary, "process might lead to potential contamination that could result in X". Or "May contain egg", "Undeclared peanut and tree nuts", or birdfeed that may contain "Excessive sodium", or the label may not have listed nuts, etc.

Look, I don't know about you, but I'm not that worried about birds with heart disease, and civil liability of poisoning someone with a nut allergy means the companies are going to recall such things without the FDA. And if you dive deeper, you find the gross majority of recalls are the COMPANY doing the recall. It wasn't the FDA that caught it, they were just the mechanism the companies used to report their own recalls. It didn't sound like the FDA caught anything. And when you read the Press Releases, they say "no reported cases of reaction" -- so there was no impact.

So do the math on that, $5B / 365 recalls means $13.7M/recall, with the gross majority of them being completely unnecessary and having caused no harm. Now that's not completely fair, since the FDA does do other things. But the ROI on this agency for this function is pretty f'in poor.

Drugs[edit | edit source]

Let's start from the top: the economics. How much does the FDA cost us in dollars and delays, versus how much benefit do they give us from protecting us from bad drugs/treatments? To know the answer to the cost/benefit of delay and overhead, we need to know both sides costs.

  1. By the time drugs get to phase II and phase III clinical trials, they've already passed a few other screenings. Only about 25% fail at this point, but 100% are delayed many years by the FDA [3]
  2. On average, it now takes $802 million, including the cost of capital, to come up with a new pharmaceutical product.[4] Companies don't eat those costs, they pass them on to consumers.
  3. With the cost of drugs going up, people turn to alternatives (other nations where they're cheaper) or alternatives which may not be effective, but are affordable.
  • "From 1990 to 1997, the use of herbal remedies increased 380 percent," reports Carol L. Norred, C.R.N.A., in a study published in the February 2000 Journal of the American Association of Nurse Anesthetists . She adds that data from 1998 indicate that about 37 percent of Americans used herbs during the previous year, spending more than $3.87 billion for these food supplements.

So the FDA drives down negatives (bad drugs), but they drive down the use of good drugs too. They drive people to worse drugs, or alternatives. Even if all the 25% were valid and only caught through the FDA process, we'd be losing at least 3x as many people as we're saving. And probably 95% of that 25% would be caught through far simpler and far quicker systems (and a few are blocked on false positives that would have helped many).

In math terms, that means about 98.75% of the drugs are falsely blocked/delayed (by about 4 years), for a 1.25% capture rate of bad drugs. That doesn't seem like a net win to me. Now figure out how many people are dying or suffering because of inaccessibility of those 98.75% drugs, versus the very few (1.25%) that are protected by the capture rate. Those are some pretty gruesome numbers to me.

Remember the false positive rate (estimated to be about 10%) prevents 8x as many good drugs from coming on market as it prevents bad drugs from coming on market.

Alternatives - there's always alternatives. For example, if instead of creating a slow government bureaucracy, that hides the cost/benefit and offers no real value to companies, and no consequences for false positives, image the alternative. In a free'er market, we setup a privately run UL (Underwriters Laboratory) that oversaw testing procedures, in exchange for limiting liability for those that passed? We could balanced incentives between quality/liability, and actual approvals and limiting false positives -- all without a government bureaucracy being a burden on taxpayers, but the drug companies would pay the costs, instead of the public at large.

Conclusion[edit | edit source]

The FDA's been a boondoggle, but mere math, logic, economics, history, will never convince anyone that wants to believe otherwise. The same way some people think the TSA keeps them safe. It might keep them slightly safer than nothing, but far less safe than a more reasonable/competently designed alternative.

  • I'm not someone who thinks the government is all bad or is all good. Nor is the FDA.
  • Controlling something through government is just a political process that increases bureaucracy: a series of rules, processes, hierarchies that slow down progress (red-tape), but increase potential accountability and order.
  • Good or bad, it is a balance between the needs of the problem and cost of the solution: did you get the implementation right?
  • If it could be done with industry cooperative and/or private licensing organizations, at a small fraction the size, with more accountability. Wouldn't that be better?
  • If someone can't ask these questions sincerely, then they're not up for a discussion on public policy, and are incapable of understanding how to avoid the moral hazard in the future.

So I point out the abuses/problems, to understand what we've been lied to about, and what we might want to watch for in the future -- and to think about those real economic and societal balances. How we can make real progress towards something more beneficial to society, instead of just leftist "progress" (progressive) just meaning bigger government with less individual liberty and less government accountability.

Articles[edit | edit source]

FDA • [8 items]

FDR - Agencies
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FDR modeled his business recovery on what the Fascists of Europe had been doing. Many assume that because it sounds so vitriolic that it must be wrong -- but if you doubt it, study the policies. Remember, that the Fascist were not as unpopular at the time as they later became. They were just a branch of Progressive Democratic Socialists, with a side of soft authoritarianism.
2014.06.06 No more cheese boards
For hundreds or thousands of years, people aged cheese in basements, often on wooden boards. The FDA recently decided that this is too dangerous, despite many award winning artisan cheeses being done this way, and no reported cases of a problem. Even the hyper-regulatory Canadians are scratching their heads as they never saw this as an opportunity/problem.
2018.04.05 Milk isn't Milk
A farmer must mislabel his Skim Milk products as artificial because he did NOT add the artificial ingredients (vitamins and nutrients) that the government demands. So real milk is labelled as artificial, and artificial milk is labelled as natural. Thanks FDA, what would we do without you?
COVID CDC & FDA
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The CDC's main goal is to protect public health from things like Global Pandemics (COVID), by getting us good info, and coordinating our response. The FDAs charter is around drugs, treatments and medical instruments. How would you score them on COVID? To me, we should eliminate both institutions entirely. Let their duties be absorbed by more competent and less political orgs.
The Jungle
TheJungleSinclair.jpg
While it was debunked at the time, pro-Government types used this book as an excuse to create the precursor to the FDA, which has become a boondoggle that's killed or hurt more people than it has ever helped. But it's a lot easier to convince the gullible than it ever is to de-program them.
Licensing and Regulation
Registration - The Noun Project.svg
These are where Government takes your rights away.... and then will sell (lease) your liberty back to you, if you follow their rules and pay their protection money. It is a tool of force, to bully you into compliance, or to create protected markets that only the authoritarians control.
Progressives gave us
You often hear advocates claiming, "if it wasn't for progressives, you wouldn't have X...", then they explain without progressives, we wouldn't have roads, schools, police, fireman, military, or some other thing we had for decades or centuries before progressives. But I wanted to compile the other side of the equation (the balances).
Suffocating Liberty - the cost of red tape
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Each new tax, law or regulation, comes with costs (compliance, non-compliance, enforcement and punishment). We have 174,545 pages of regulations, 73,954 pages in our tax code, 23,000 page in our federal legal code, double that for statutes, 300,000 criminal punishments from administrative agencies. Then add in the state+local laws, regulations and taxes on top.


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🔗 More

Organizations
Organizations that I felt the need to comment on (more often on the negs than the positives). But there's good/bad in all.

Government
This is looking at Government from an American, Libertarian, and idealistic PoV, that many foreigners will not understand.

The Left Lies
When the truth disagrees with your agenda, you can grow (change) or lie. The left usually chooses the latter.

TBD
List all the articles that have work to be done on them.

Alt-Liberty
Two different Americas: one that's striving for more liberty, and another that's striving for less.


🔗 Links

Here's some articles if you want to learn about the topic:

Tags: Organizations  Government  Left Lies  TBD  Alt-Liberty


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