Would junk food taxes really make people eat better?

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Public health officials grappling with the obesity epidemic have debated a wide range of approaches to helping slim the American waistline. To some degree, everything from building more sidewalks to banning chocolate milk has been explored. Yet few tactics have been as polarizing as the possibility of introducing tariffs on treats. Despite endorsement from several respected obesity researchers and politicians, soda taxes, for example, have been subject to severe scrutiny, as critics protested that implementing a tax before verifying that it would achieve the end result was shortsighted and potentially overreaching. So, in attempt to determine just how sin taxes might impact people’s food choices, psychologists from the University of Buffalo decided to put junk food levies to the test—in the lab.

Researchers recruited shoppers to peruse the aisles of a mock supermarket filled with 68 common foods labeled with nutritional information. Participants were given a predetermined amount of cash, and were told to use that money to purchase a week’s worth of groceries for a family. The first time, all of the products on the shelves were priced in keeping with local supermarkets. In subsequent trips, however, junk food was taxed—an additional 12.5%, then 25%— or healthier foods were subsidized to reduce cost.

The study, published in the journal Psychological Science revealed that taxes were more effective at getting people to avoid certain products than subsidies were at prompting healthier food purchases. In scenarios where junk foods were taxed, study participants generally came away with a lower caloric total for their groceries, and a higher ratio of protein to fats and carbohydrates. Yet, in situations where healthy foods were subsidized, the savings were often spent on additional junk food. That is, instead of stocking up on more fruits and vegetables because they were cheaper, the study’s shoppers bought their veggies, and then used the leftover cash to bring home extra treats like chips and soda. In the end, the subsidies-only scenarios resulted in higher total calorie counts, and didn’t result in overall nutritional improvement on the week’s groceries.

Because the scenario is hypothetical, the findings certainly shouldn’t be taken as the final word in the sin tax debate, the researchers stress, but should instead be used to inform the ongoing discussion about practical ways to battle obesity. To that end, they say, the next step should be research to determine whether these results would be replicated in the real world.

Related Topics: junk food, obesity epidemic, sin tax, soda tax, Body & Mind, Food & Drink, Nutrition, Obesity, Prevention
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  • misclicked

    No, I think lowering prices for healthy and organic food is what will make people eat healthier. How can you expect people to eat healthy or at least choose to eat healthy when they can’t afford to?

  • dotybj

    @misclicked: did you even read the article?

  • leylas

    Finally! some common sense in food pricing! How about eliminating the junk food subsidies that make it so cheap compared to nourishing food? The tax on junk food could be used to subsidize health care, or subsidize organic food.

  • carpevis

    I believe a combination of lower healthy food prices and much higher prices for junk foods would be more effective in moving people in general toward healthier eating habits. If one doesn’t vastly increase the price of junk foods while making healthy foods more affordable, it’s natural that people will try to buy more of the unhealthy stuff.

  • http://www.reconstructingthirty.com Chad

    This is an interesting concept as tariffs have been one of the most effective tools in tobacco control. Although food can certainly be an addiction for some of us, it is somewhat different from tobacco, in that even “bad” foods may be enjoyed in moderation as part of a healthy diet. Thus, I’m not sure these types of tariffs make sense as public policy.

    http://www.reconstructingthirty.com

  • http://gingerrzz.wordpress.com gingerrzz

    tariffs are a good idea generally speaking. some people may crave junk more because they cant have it as often. Personally it would help me eat healthier if items with ingredients like high fructose corn syrup were clearly marked. it’s in so many things we presume to be healthy. Many whole grain breads, granola bars, yogurt, and fruit juice. Sometimes i forget to read the label or my eyes over look the fine print.

  • bradykp

    i agree with chad, this is a tougher question, since these things can be enjoyed in moderation. i think the real answer is ending the subsidies that make a lot of these junk foods so much cheaper. couple this with updating nutritional information on the label to be more reflective of how Americans consume. It’s misleading to label the calorie count on a 20 oz bottle of soda the way we currently do (as 2.5 servings when a majority of people drink this as 1 serving). the tax should be the last resort…

  • quails22

    In the real world, I do not think a tax on junk food would prevent a lot of people from buying it. Some people would still buy the junk food and then buy even less fruit and veg. It could have the opposite of the desired effect in many cases.

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