Milei Implements Peer Approval for Food

 [[{“value”:”Reason: In a sweeping move to overhaul Argentina’s food trade policies, Javier Milei’s administration officially deregulated food imports and exports on Monday. The reform, outlined in Decree 35/2025, seeks to boost foreign trade, cut bureaucratic red tape, and lower consumer prices. Federico Sturzenegger, head of the Ministry of Deregulation and State Transformation, explained in a post on
The post Milei Implements Peer Approval for Food appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.”}]] 

Reason: In a sweeping move to overhaul Argentina’s food trade policies, Javier Milei’s administration officially deregulated food imports and exports on Monday. The reform, outlined in Decree 35/2025, seeks to boost foreign trade, cut bureaucratic red tape, and lower consumer prices.

Federico Sturzenegger, head of the Ministry of Deregulation and State Transformation, explained in a post on X that the measure “seeks cheaper food for Argentines and more Argentine food for the world.”

Under the new policy, food products and packaging certified by countries with “high sanitary surveillance” can now enter Argentina without any additional registration or approval processes. These items will be automatically recognized under the Argentine Food Code, cutting down on administrative delays and costs for importers.

The legislation identifies countries such as Australia, New Zealand, Canada, the United States, Israel, Japan, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom, as well as the European Union, as having similar or higher sanitary standards than Argentina.

As Sturzenegger explains in his post, this measure “eliminates requirements to register and authorize: samples, products, establishments, warehouses, utensils, and containers (32 pages of paperwork).”

An excellent “peer approval” policy and one that I have long supported when it comes to the FDA and drug approvals. In fact, since 2010 the US FDA has begun to recognize other countries as having comparable food safety systems. To date, Canada, Australia and New Zealand have been recognized with a Systems Recognition partnership.

Systems Recognition (SR) is a partnership between the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and a foreign regulatory counterpart, in which the agencies have concluded that they operate comparable regulatory programs that yield similar food safety outcomes.

Argentina’s policy is unilateral and assumes equivalence if a country uses recognized standards (e.g., Codex Alimentarius) or has high sanitary vigilance while the FDA’s SR policy is bilateral and involves more regulatory harmonization and investigation. I prefer the Argentinian approach. Nevertheless, both programs have the goals of simplifying trade, avoiding duplicate inspections, and helping to prioritize scarce inspection resources.

I encourage the FDA to build on SR for food and extend it to drugs. This could be done in a minor and major way, both of which would useful. The minor reform would be peer approval for already-approved US drugs. In this way, importation could ease drug shortages. The FDA has done this in the past on an ad-hoc basis but it should be made permanent. The second, more major reform, would to extend peer-approval to any drug or device approved by a stringent authority.

The post Milei Implements Peer Approval for Food appeared first on Marginal REVOLUTION.

 Economics, Food and Drink, Law, Medicine 


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