How McDonald's, KFC, Others Can Recover From Chinese Food Scandal

International Business Times

Published Jul 22, 2014 11:46AM ET

Updated Jul 22, 2014 12:15PM ET

How McDonald's, KFC, Others Can Recover From Chinese Food Scandal

By Connor Adams Sheets - As the scope of China’s latest food scandal broadens amid Tuesday reports that Starbucks, Burger King, Papa John’s and IKEA all bought meat from a poultry firm shut down Sunday over food safety violations, experts say the implicated companies need to take meaningful steps to strengthen their food safety policies.

“Companies seem to be willing to make the investment to do due diligence for things like corruption and bribery because they have major legal consequences, but tainted food products can do enormous damage to reputations around the world as well,” Alexandra Wrage, president of Maryland-based nonprofit Trace International, which helps its members enact due diligence and compliance programs, said.

“There has to be the investment to get this right ... In a place like China where you aren’t confident in your supply chain, companies need to realize that the responsibility is going to shift to them to monitor their supply chain ensure that it is safe and reputable and reliable.”

McDonald's (NYSE:MCD) and Yum! Brands Inc (NYSE:YUM) apologized to consumers Sunday as a result of the expanding scandal, which emerged in the wake of a report in Chinese media about Shanghai Husi Food Co Ltd. A subsidiary of the U.S.-based, privately held OSI Group LLC, the supplier was shuttered by Chinese regulators on Sunday after a TV investigation showed footage of employees using meat dropped on the floor and expired chicken.

The fallout for McDonald’s and Yum -- the parent company of the KFC and Pizza Hut restaurant chains -- has been swift, with their stocks falling by 1.45 percent and 4.25 percent respectively on Monday, underscoring the need for them to address their supply chain failings.

And Reuters reported Tuesday morning that other companies including Starbucks Corporation (NASDAQ:SBUX), Burger King Worldwide Inc (NYSE:BKW), Papa John's International Inc (NASDAQ:PZZA)  and the privately held The IKEA Group have come forward to reveal that they too have sold products containing meat supplied by Shanghai Husi. McDonald’s told the newswire that it had determined that it sold meat from the supplier in stores in Japan and Thailand.

The companies are left facing the twin uphill battles of restoring confidence in their brands and putting in place measures to ensure that they avoid future problems in China, which has been plagued by repeated food safety scandals in recent years. The latest allegations came as Yum -- which earns more than half its revenue from its Chinese locations -- finally seemed to be recovering from a late 2012 scandal over a report that revealed it had been using chicken from two Chinese suppliers that were overusing growth hormones.

The first thing the implicated companies need to do in order to recover from this current scandal is to launch a public relations campaign aimed at reassuring consumers, according to Candice Lee, a franchising attorney at the California law firm Palmieri Tyler.

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“They need to show that they’re looking for a replacement supplier or they’re using a supplier from another country or are investigating the supplier, to make sure that they are going through the due diligence of ensuring that they find a supplier that will be up to their standards going forward,” Lee said. “Something to put the consumers’ minds at ease that they’re not going to use the tainted product and to ensure that this is not going to happen again.”