The Chinese government has launched a sweeping crackdown on illegal ‘ghost kitchens’ operating on food delivery platforms, a move that echoes growing concerns in the UK about food safety and transparency in the takeaway industry. Meanwhile, Britain’s Food Standards Agency (FSA) has announced stronger enforcement measures, raising the bar for hygiene and labelling standards. For millions of workers and families who rely on cheap takeaways, the question remains: will these changes protect the public or just push up prices?
In China, regulators have shut down thousands of unlicensed delivery-only kitchens that were cooking meals in cramped, unsanitary conditions. The crackdown follows a series of food poisoning outbreaks and revelations that some ‘ghost kitchens’ were operating without basic hygiene certificates. For British workers, this hits close to home. The UK’s own takeaway sector has boomed during the cost-of-living crisis, with families turning to apps like Deliveroo and Just Eat to stretch budgets. But a hidden network of so-called ‘dark kitchens’ – commercial spaces with no customer seating – has raised alarm about worker safety and food standards.
The FSA has responded by strengthening its Safer Food for All strategy, introducing mandatory hygiene rating displays on delivery platforms and more frequent inspections. “This is about protecting the public, especially those on lower incomes who are most reliant on takeaways,” said an FSA spokesperson. But critics warn that the new rules could burden small businesses, many of which are run by ethnic minorities and offer affordable options. “If you slap more costs on these kitchens, the price goes up, and the poorest bear the brunt,” said a union representative from the Independent Workers Union of Great Britain.
The regional inequality gap is stark. In London, where a chicken tikka masala might cost £8, inspections are thorough. In the North, where a similar meal can be half that price, resources are stretched. The FSA’s record on enforcement has been patchy: last year, one in five takeaways in Manchester were not displaying their hygiene ratings. Meanwhile, delivery platforms have faced pressure to improve. “It’s a race to the bottom,” said Dr. Nima Patel, a food policy expert. “The platforms take a cut, the worker gets minimum wage, and the customer gets a cheap meal. But the system is fragile.”
The Chinese model offers a cautionary tale. Beijing’s swift action has cleaned up many rogue operators, but at a cost: some small vendors have been forced out of business, and larger chains have absorbed the market. In the UK, the FSA’s approach is less draconian, but union activists argue it doesn’t go far enough. “We need proper enforcement, not just guidelines,” said Sarah Taylor, a fast-food worker in Leeds. “I’ve worked in kitchens where the floors were rotting. The bosses know the inspectors come once a year.”
For families already squeezed by rising bills, the stakes are high. A chicken shop in Birmingham might feed a family of four for £15. But if standards improve, that price could rise. The TUC has called for a public register of all dark kitchens and a minimum wage for delivery riders, many of whom are on zero-hour contracts. “Food safety and worker rights are two sides of the same coin,” said a union spokesperson.
The FSA insists that stronger standards will not necessarily mean higher prices, citing efficiency gains from digital tracking. But in a real economy where every penny counts, the balance between safety and affordability is delicate. As China shows, decisive action can clean up the industry, but it also reshapes it – often in ways that leave the working class behind. The UK must now decide which path to take.








