Canada’s Food Guide – A New Dish With a Dash of Condescension

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Canada’s new food guide is finally here. After years of celebrating our agricultural know-how, our food guide has now gone urban. But c’mon Health Canada, enough with the patronizing already

by Sylvain Charlebois – Ottawa Citizen

Say goodbye to the four food groups; they are now gone. Almost 12 years after the launch of the previous version, Canada’s new food guide celebrates food by displaying a plate filled with greens, fruits, plant proteins and grains. And if you look very carefully, you’ll see a cup of yogurt, alongside a piece of beef that looks a little like a piece of wood.

Unlike the old version, the new guide can apply to different demographic groups and lifestyles. Somewhat less innovative, it also encourages Canadians to cook, eat with other people, and consider water as their drink of choice.

The new food guide is a bold move from Health Canada, but still contains some hits and misses.


“Some of it is actually quite condescending, with trite advice only an idealistic health professional would give”


The plate concept is a clever one. Few Canadians were able to tell how big portions should be in the old version and many can relate to the size of a plate. Dominated by vegetables and fruits, grains and proteins are now sidekicks. And, as expected, animal-based proteins are now second fiddle to plant-based proteins. Dairy and meat products have lost the protein wars, which means that in Ottawa, Health Canada won over Agriculture and Food Canada, probably for the first time. Nutrition-conscious minds prevailed, for better or worse.

Historically, the guide has showcased our agricultural know-how, beginning with its first edition released in 1942. At that time, not only did almost 30 per cent of our population live on farms, but nearly 30 per cent of our national GDP came from agriculture. It was expected that the government promote commodities grown in our own backyard. The guide displayed products we all knew: milk, fish, and meat. Now, less than two per cent of Canadians live on farms, and agriculture represents a fraction of our national GDP, compared to that of 1942.

The tone of this new guide is different as well, as it embraces a different language: the nutrient-focused jargon Health Canada believes Canadians are ready for. Fiber and proteins are now at the core of this new publication. In other words, the guide has gone urban for the first time in its history.

It is more contemporary, multicultural, and adaptable to varying modern diets, and it’s about time. For the Liberals heading into an election, this city-friendly platform will not become a liability. In fact, it will only further alienate regions that have historically supported the Conservatives.

There are some weak points in this new guide, though.

Some of it is actually quite condescending, with trite advice only an idealistic health professional would give.

“Enjoy your food” or “Be mindful of eating habits” or the patronizing “Be aware of food marketing” are displayed prominently in the new guide. As the food guide became more sophisticated with what we should be eating, it also got a little smug on the behavioural aspects of our diet. The insensibility of treating Canadians like five-year old children is very obvious.

Since the food industry spends billions on marketing and the average Canadian will see roughly 1500 advertisements per day, Health Canada seems to suggest Canadians can hide from all of this for the sake of eating better. A bit of a stretch on Health Canada’s part.

But most important, with this new guide, Health Canada is now at odds with our domestic buying local movement. Eggs, poultry and milk are by far the biggest losers in this new guide. Supported by supply management, our grandiose protectionist policy which allows us to produce what we need, these sectors may end up overproducing in just a few years’ time. As we institutionalize a new message through pedagogical programs at all levels, behaviours will change. Our domestic production for these commodities may require recalibration in the near future, and many of our farms could disappear.

Our agricultural trade policies are currently not synchronized with our own domestic food policies, and this new guide will only make things worse. Ottawa cannot carry on stating it unconditionally supports our supply-management policy. It clearly doesn’t, at least not anymore.

On the fruit and vegetable front, things can get tricky as well. Our food market is highly vulnerable due to our dependency on imported fruits and vegetables, especially during the winter time. Fruits and vegetables are the most volatile food category we deal with as consumers.

As an example, lettuce prices went up by a whopping 39.4 per cent over 12 months in Canada. For us mere mortals, these price shifts are hard to cope with. We will need to think of ways to raise our veggie game in Canada, and fast.

In sum, the new food guide is a step forward, with a dash of demeaning comments along the way. Now, if we can get Health Canada to review our food guide every five years like most industrialized nations, perhaps our federal agency will stop treating the release of the food guide like it was revealing the location of Cleopatra’s tomb.


Sylvain Charlebois is Professor in Food Distribution and Policy, Faculties of Management and Agriculture, Dalhousie University and Senior Director, Agri-Food Analytics Lab, Dalhousie University

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