I think that's exactly what will happen. A lot of people live in ignorance. They are too apathetic to turn the box around and read the label. This way they'll be forced to read the label, assuming they can read. If 10% of them say "whoa, maybe I shouldn't give my kids this", then it's worth it.
How does in any way
force people to read the label?
It doesn't, it's just clutter in the way of the info we seek.
I don't go to the store to shop for 'calories'.
E.g., I go to the grocery store looking for pasta. OK, I see pasta.
Then I narrow down to the shape I want. Is it fettuccini or rotelle?
When I get the shape I want, I'm then looking for the next criteria, is it semolina, whole wheat, spinich etc.
Only after drilling down through those criteria would I even remotely be interested in comparing nutritional value between choices.
To start with nutrition is back asswards.
Little packages have already been mentioned, how much info can you really jam onto the front? Will the font be so small as to be useless?
WTH is the 'front' of a round object?
Do canned goods already meet this requirement, but it's just that stores stock them backwards so the 'front' with the nutritional info is facing backwards?
What's the 'front' of a cube etc?
I understand legislating that such info be displayed, but jeebus micro-managing the placement is too dang nanny-ish for me. "Since you're too lazy to turn the package over and read the back, we're just gonna have to make it be on the front".
How do they know this anyway? Have they done studies confirming that people interested in this nutritional info are that lazy?
Or maybe studies actually confirming that placing it on the front makes people somehow magically more aware and interested?
WTH did this idea come from?
Fern