Research Keyword: health claims

Driving Innovation Through Regulatory Design and Corporate Behaviour: A Case Study of Functional Food Industry in Japan

This study examines how government regulations on health claims for dietary supplements affect how companies in Japan develop and sell these products. The research found that companies willing to invest in their own clinical trials to prove their products work tend to create more successful products and gain bigger market share. The study suggests that well-designed regulations can actually encourage companies to invest more in research and create better, more innovative products rather than just copying existing ones.

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The Co-Evolution of Markets and Regulation in the Japanese Functional Food Industry: Balancing Risk and Benefit

This research examines how Japan regulates functional foods – products designed to promote health beyond basic nutrition. The study shows that food regulations have evolved alongside industry growth, trying to balance protecting consumers from unsafe products while allowing companies to innovate and make health claims. Using a framework that examines both safety concerns and consumer benefit information, the authors trace how Japan’s regulatory system changed from the 1960s to today, showing how regulations respond to industry needs and safety incidents.

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