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NewsHow Australian is 'Australian Made'?
How Australian is 'Australian Made'?

How Australian is 'Australian Made'?

It was clearly labelled “ Aussie Beer” complete with a map of Australia and green and gold colours… yet it was brewed in China.

Or the ‘just caught prawn meat’, again with an Aussie map and flag, which while caught locally was actually processed and packaged in Thailand.

Such are the half-truths, and sometimes outright deceptions, which have copped fines recently from the genuinely true blue Australia Competition and Consumer Commission.

So while memories of our national day are still warm here’s a quick guide of how to decipher some of the porkies and small print around sneaky country of origin labels for food and drink.

And the good news is that soon they’ll be much better labels with more graphic information and reliable logos, complete with a kangaroo, to help you decide.

The problem in part has arisen as globalisation has given us access to once exotic foodstuffs from all over the world. Generally this is good and last week I even found frozen avocado from Peru in the supermarket.

But it can leave a sour taste in our mouths when merchants seek to exploit our desire to buy local with confusing descriptions.

Claims such as made in, grown in or product of Australia might imply the obvious to most of us but they have specific and differing definitions.

For example ‘Product of’, which usually applies to processed foods, if attached to something like smoked salmon means the fish was both caught and smoked in Australia.

If ‘Grown in Australia’ is attached to a piece of fruit it means just that in Oz not anywhere else.  These two descriptions are for now the simplest way to buy Australian.

With the term ‘Made in’, things get a bit more complex.   The ACCC says it means the food must have been manufactured, and not just packed in Australia, and at least 50% of the costs of processing must have been incurred in this country.

The ingredients might not even have come from Australia. The ACCC gives the example of jam. More than half the cost of making it might have been paid here but the fruit and/or sugar could have come from elsewhere.

The label which drives many consumers batty is ‘Made in Australia from local and imported ingredients’ which can mean anything and reveal nothing.

In part things are going to get better. Last July the federal government released the designs for new country-of-origin labels, which will specify the percentage of Australian produce in any foodstuff.

But there’s still no requirement to spell out where all of the key ingredients might be sourced from if they are not from Australia. CHOICE gives the example of ice cream. The dairy products might be proudly Australian and the consumer is left in the dark as to where the berries within might come from

Check out the new look labels and see if they will make your shopping any easier. People chose to buy Australian, which can sometimes but not always cost a bit more, for many reasons such as taste, purity even loyalty.

Whatever the reason the consumer has to have confidence in the product and that it comes from where they have good reason to believe it comes from. Aussie Beer, flags, maps all indicate a provenance of Australia. You shouldn’t have the read the fine print at the back of the pack to be sure.

PS

Some foods and other products claim to be ‘proudly Australian owned’ or ‘100% Aussie owned’. It might tell you about who the brand belongs to but doesn’t mean a thing as to where the product was made or where it’s ingredients/components came from.

Originally posted on .

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How Australian is 'Australian Made'?

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Geoff
Geoff from NSW commented:

Whose side are our politicions on? How about they give our farmers and processors/ manufacturers a fair go and label things properly and clearly so we the dumb public can buy Australian! 

Graham
Graham from WA commented:

What about a petition organized by the Club and delivered to the Government insisting that labelling be specific and not open to mis-interpretation 

Howard
Howard from NSW replied to Graham:

I could not agree more Graham. 

James
James from NSW commented:

It is very difficult to "Buy Australian" when we have a very diverse multicultural society. 

selwyn
selwyn from QLD commented:

there is a scam going on within the producers who are also into the ears of our useless political liars AKA politicians , all of this should point to one thing and if its made wholly in AUSTRALIA then it should have the roo emblem forget about grown here and packed some where else , remember (half measures avail us nothing , has anyone ever heard of a woman being half pregnant ? its all or nothing S G NOFFKE hervey QLD 

Someone
Someone from VIC commented:

Is there such a thing as tinned asparagus, grown and processed in Australia that is sold locally? If so, where? 

Trevor
Trevor from VIC commented:

I was told that the first 3 digits of the bar code tells you where the product originated. eg 931 Australia; 690 - 695 China; 740-745 Central America etc. Is this genuine? 

john
john from VIC replied to Trevor:

Hi Trevor - not always, as it denotes where the head offices of the product are located, not the actual product itself. Like you I hope for some real transparency, so we can decide fr ourselves what and who to support. 

john
john from VIC commented:

About time common sense prevailed in labeling! It's either made here or it's not - either Aussie produced/grown/made or not. 

Tony
Tony from VIC commented:

why is this happening still what are our politicians doing to stop this practice quick answer nothing . 

David
David from NSW commented:

The problem is that Local/State/Federal Governments are in the pockets of BIG BUSINESS , so instead of having a simple system that works , we are face with a system that misleads the consumer , but puts profits in MATES pockets . How we get around this problem is scrap the system we have and install that simple system , that has massive fines for Companies that cheat with imported ingredients that are not listed as imported on the label , also Australian slogans should not be allowed on imported products . 

Fay
Fay from QLD commented:

There is also the practice in supermarkets that sell fresh fruit of mixing the imported products in with the Australian ones, note the sign that says Australian and USA on Red Grapefruit recently so I had to search through them to find one that still had its Australian sticker on it too know that it really was grown here. 

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