Advertisement
Chuck out expired meds
Expired medicines are dangerous - but how can you get rid of them safely?
On an empty stomach
Should you eat before or after your daily exercise? DietDoc settles this question.
     TERMS     GET A DAILY HEALTH TIP  
  
MAKE HEALTH24 YOUR HOMEPAGE   
H24 NEWS MEDICAL SCHEMES DIET FITNESS NATURAL MAN WOMAN SEX PREGNANCY CHILD TEEN SUN
FOCUS CENTRES MEDS ORAL PET MIND GRAPHICS VIDEOS ANTI-AGEING WIN TOOLS EXPERTS TALK FIND
DO THIS:TEST/QUIZ YOURSELFGREAT DIET GUIDESI WANT TO...
 General
Snack tax to combat obesity?

How would you feel about a tax on snack foods to combat obesity? Imagine having to pay one or two cents extra on each packet of sweets, bar of chocolate, bottle of cold drink and hamburger? The revenues collected by taxing luxury foods could be put to good use to fund obesity research and educate the general public about healthy eating habits.

Advertisement
Does this sound like a scenario from George Orwell’s 1984 with Big Brother watching you as you chew a sweetie or down a fizzy drink? Well, consider how other ‘sins’, like smoking and alcohol are being taxed and such a scenario is not as far fetched as it seems.

The obesity epidemic
Obesity is assuming epidemic proportions all over the developed world. It was recently found that 37% of French adults are obese, while obesity in French children has increased by 300% in the last 15 years.

This phenomenon in a country that always had one of the lowest obesity rates in the western world, despite that fact that the French enjoy their food and wine, started alarm bells ringing. If the French population is expanding at such a rate, then other countries like the USA, the UK and South Africa, don’t stand a chance in winning the Battle of the Bulge.

Something clearly needs to be done to combat this ever-increasing rise in obesity before the entire world is overweight.

Yale study
A study conducted by Yale University in the USA proposed that by levying a one cent tax on snack foods, vast amounts of money could be made available for research and education to address the worldwide obesity epidemic.

The eminent researchers calculated that the US Treasury would be able to raise $1,8 billion per annum with a snack tax. The breakdown of where the income would be coming from is fascinating, because it gives a clear indication of which foods are consumed in the greatest quantities: $1,5 billion from cold drinks; $70 million from candy or sweets.

$54 million from chips and $190 million from other snack-type foods.

It would appear that cold drinks are by far the greatest contributors to weight gain in the USA, followed by candy, sweets and chocolates.

These figures are mindboggling and one can imagine that the South African Revenue Services would love to get their hands on such sums.

Will it happen?
Most people would regard such a snack tax as far-fetched. But seeing that the doors have been opened for taxing other ‘sinful’ habits, like smoking and drinking alcohol, it would be surprising if governments around the world did not latch on to such an easy way of making extra money. And you, as the consumer, would after all not feel that initial one cent increase in the price of cold drinks, chocolate, sweets, chips, hamburgers, hot dogs, ice cream, etc.

The danger is of course that governments would not stop at one cent per item. Once the money comes rolling in, they would be tempted to increase their tax every now and then, and eventually we would be paying 10-50c per item in ‘sin tax’.

Because this type of money gathering is highly attractive to governments and as it can be rationalised in similar fashion to taxes on smoking and alcohol, we might be paying tax on our little weaknesses like chocs and chips one of these days.

So be prepared to pay for your indulgences - Big Brother will get his pound of flesh! If this will make anyone any thinner remains to be seen.

Yes, spending more money on obesity research and trying to find viable solutions to help people to lose weight and educating everyone on how to avoid obesity, are wonderful ideas.

Let's just hope that if a snack tax is implemented, the tax money is used for these high ideals and not channelled into the ‘gravy train’ instead. - (Dr I.V. van Heerden, DietDoc)

Any questions? Ask DietDoc

 
Print this article
 Rate this article
Poor 1 2 3 4 5 Excellent

 JOBS
Civil Engineering Technician
Gauteng - Johannesburg
Financial Manager
R380,000-400,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - West Rand
Treasury Specialist
R300,000-380,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
JAVA DEVELOPER (YL028 – 04/09)
Gauteng
DELPHI DEVELOPER (YL023 – 04/09)
R320,000-360,000 Per Annum Cost To Company Market Related
Gauteng
Senior and Lead .NET Developers (C#.NET, Arc, Design, Code.)
R300,000-600,000 Per Annum Cost To Company
Gauteng - Johannesburg
A C# Developer (C Sharp Developer)
Gauteng - Johannesburg
A C++ Developer (Software Developer)
Gauteng - Pretoria

 
Previous article: Next article:
Diet preparations before surgery Post-op liquid diets
Sign up
 *Daily tip
 Newsletter
 Special offers
*Stand a chance to win R1000 every month!
 OTHER ARTICLES
Diet lessons from Survivor
Survivor: endomorphs vs. ectomorphs
Survivor: Starvation diets
Diet preparations before surgery
Snack tax to combat obesity?
Post-op liquid diets
DNA-diet to reduce cancer risk
Breakfast – the most frequently missed meal
Are employers responsible for bad eating habits?
Hypoglycaemia and what to do about it
Big bums and micro-fat surgery
5-a-day for better health
60 seconds to healthy winter eating
Cystic fibrosis and the diet
Cystic fibrosis and supplementation
More on cystic fibrosis and diet
Sensational diet and food stories
Gene tests solve diet riddles
Genes, diet and disease
More on gene tests and your diet
Obesity - staggering statistics
Green tea – healthy or not?
Beetroot, garlic, onions and Aids
Red palm oil - a boon to health
Should government ban junk food?
The metabolic syndrome
Diet and gallbladder disease
Could magnesium prevent diabetes?
Soy - healthy or harmful?
Coconut meat, milk: healthy or not?
IGF-1: what we know
The lowdown on carnitine
The lowdown on GM foods
SA labelling of GM foods
GM foods: popular myths
Eggs – healthy or not?
Top 10 super foods
The healthy hunter-gatherer
Smoking cessation and weight gain
Heat stroke and dehydration woes
Antioxidants: powerful protectors
No Diet Day
Vitamin D and cancer
Survivor: food, seductive food
Iron overload: are you at risk?
Vit. D could protect the heart
Top 10 foods with hidden salt
Don’t worry, just eat curry!
Food then and now
Sugar's effect on cholesterol
Home-cooked meals come out tops
Insulin resistance risk factors
Survivor SA: balanced diet best
Functional food: a booming industry
Fight disease with functional foods
Five foods that could kill you
9 healthy food tips
7 good reasons to switch to ostrich
Book now for Holford workshops
How food affects your mood
Favourite foods: the good news
Antioxidants under fire
South Africans all clogged up?
Poisoning yourself with vitamins?
What will fans eat in 2010?
Berry healthy
Multivitamins – are they worth it?
Are we getting shorter and fatter?
Eat Mediterranean, live longer
Eating illegal fish species?
Chinese product scares: a timeline
The ultimate diet solution
Dieticians to the rescue
Water horror
Better-body resolutions for 2008
 



 Sponsored links
 Health24 links

Advertisement
 Top Condition
 Centres