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Biden invokes Defense Production Act to address infant formula shortage

XINHUA

發布於 2022年05月18日23:52 • Xiong Maoling,Xu Yuan

Photo taken on May 13, 2022 shows shelves of baby formula at a store in Virginia, the United States. (Xinhua/Liu Jie)

"Directing firms to prioritize and allocate the production of key infant formula inputs will help increase production and speed up in supply chains," the White House said.

WASHINGTON, May 18 (Xinhua) -- U.S. President Joe Biden on Wednesday invoked the Defense Production Act to boost production of baby formula and approved flights to bring in overseas infant formula amid a nationwide shortage.

"The president is requiring suppliers to direct needed resources to infant formula manufacturers before any other customer who may have ordered that good," according to a White House fact sheet.

"Directing firms to prioritize and allocate the production of key infant formula inputs will help increase production and speed up in supply chains," it said.

Biden has also directed the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture to use Department of Defense commercial aircraft to pick up overseas infant formula that meets U.S. health and safety standards, "so it can get to store shelves faster."

COVID-19-induced supply chain disruptions have already led to low stock levels for infant formula, but the problem was worsened after the Food and Drug Administration issued a wide-ranging recall of Abbott's infant formula and closed an Abbott Nutrition facility in February after several babies fell ill with bacterial infections and two died.

For the week ending May 8, out-of-stock rate for baby formula nationwide hit 43 percent, up 12 percent from April, according to statistics from Datasembly, which tracks supply in real time.

Datasembly's real-time hyper-local data analysis shows that baby formula stock was relatively stable for the first half of 2021, with out-of-stock fluctuation between 2-8 percent.

"This issue has been compounded by supply chain challenges, product recalls and historic inflation," said Datasembly CEO Ben Reich. ■

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