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Can Food Taxes and Subsidies Help Improve Health Outcomes?

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Globally, millions of deaths every year can be attributed to bad diets, and these numbers are rising.  These deaths are preventable, and one strategy to encourage consumers  to make healthier choices is through fiscal policy, such as subsidies or  taxes. Examples include taxes on products known to be bad for health,  like tobacco and alcohol, with an aim to discourage consumers from  purchasing these products.

The World Health Organization (WHO) has recruited a team of  researchers from UConn and the University of Illinois Chicago to assess  if similar policies for food items impact health, in the hopes of  providing policymakers around the world with data on the outcomes of  these policy measures. They recently published two papers in the Journal  of the American Medical Association, one focusing on economic and health outcomes of food taxes and subsidies, and another focusing on outcomes of taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages.

One challenge the researchers encountered is that food taxes are  politically challenging and difficult to implement, therefore there are  few examples to draw data from, says UConn Rudd Center for Food Policy and Health Director of Economic Initiatives and lead author Tatiana Andreyeva.  Additionally, Andreyeva explains that these questions are relatively  new, and though there is a wealth of data on purchasing behaviors, the  evidence on diet and health outcomes is less plentiful. As a starting  point, the researchers focused on data for subsidies and taxes together  to get a broad look at how these policies can influence consumer  behaviors.

Tatiana Andreyeva.

Tatiana Andreyeva (UConn Rudd Center)

“When we say food taxes, we mean a tax on unhealthy foods,” says  Andreyeva, an associate professor in the Department of Agricultural and  Resource Economics in the College of Agriculture, Health and Natural Resources.  “An example is in Mexico, which in 2014 implemented a tax on  nonessential energy-dense foods as part of a national strategy to  address obesity. In Denmark, a tax on saturated fat was repealed,  so we don’t have a lot of food taxes or policies as evidence of the  effectiveness of food taxes, but we do have a lot of sugar-sweetened  beverage (SSB) taxes to study.”

For subsidies, the idea is that, if prices are reduced and healthier  foods are more affordable, people will buy more. Andreyeva says it is  easier to find subsidies for fruit and vegetables, and some countries  also have subsidies for healthier products and staple foods to support  nutrition for those with lower incomes.

“As an example, subsidies have been used widely in the US to support  nutrition, particularly for participants in food assistance programs,  such as SNAP. One example is the Double Up Food Bucks program, where SNAP participants can purchase vegetables at farmer’s  markets, and for every dollar of SNAP benefits spent, the purchaser gets  $2 in produce. That’s quite a significant subsidy.”

For their recent studies, the researchers performed meta-analyses  where they evaluated peer-reviewed studies published across the world to  look at the effect of subsidies and taxes on purchases, prices,  consumption, diet, and data on other outcomes that are available.

“We assessed how purchases of fruit and vegetables change in response  to subsidies for fruit and vegetables and estimated how much consumer  demand would change with lower prices through subsidies,” Andreyeva  says.

The results showed a significant improvement in consumer purchases  and demand for fruit and vegetables. In the case of taxes on SSBs, sales  decline significantly too. Both policy measures worked as intended;  however, the consumers didn’t respond as drastically to fruit and  vegetable price changes as the researchers expected, says Andreyeva.

From the data available, Andreyeva says they also didn’t see a  significant change in terms of the effect of subsidies on consumption.

“This could be due to not having enough studies looking specifically at consumption yet.”

With millions of data points from sales, purchases are easier to  analyze, but Andreyeva says consumption – whether the purchases are  consumed and what the consumer’s health outcomes are – is much more  difficult to measure, as it requires more expensive and time-consuming  data collection and follow-up; for example, through surveys and  interviews. Though more intensive, Andreyeva points out that this  health-focused data is vital to understanding the health outcomes of  these policies.

Plastic soda bottles on a white background. (Beverage, drink ) Jan. 20, 2021. (Sean Flynn/UConn Photo)

Taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages have been effective in reducing consumption (Sean Flynn / UConn Photo).

Successful examples of small sales taxes on snack items and  sugar-sweetened beverages in different areas in the United States and  Mexico show these taxes are promising ways to incentivize healthier  decisions. The argument that items like SSBs are nonessential makes them  easier to tax, Andreyeva explains:

“There’s no nutrition in these beverages. While for food, any food  you look at has some nutrition, and it is a lot harder to impose a tax.  Also, beverage taxes are easier to implement because they are targeting  one industry, while if you tax snacks you have a much broader range of  companies that are impacted, and you get more opposition from more  industries.”

The need for specific definitions of what is considered healthy or  not is demonstrated by the example from Denmark with the tax on  saturated fat. Andreyeva explains the measure was quickly repealed due  to opposition stemming from the tax’s impact on meat and dairy prices.

Larger taxes also get more pushback, whereas with smaller taxes, like the 6.35% sales tax on candy and carbonated beverages in place in Connecticut, many people are unaware they are paying it.

Measures like taxes and subsidies are just one potential strategy  that can be implemented to help consumers make better choices. However,  there are larger systemic barriers for those trying to make healthier  food choices, says Andreyeva. Even if prices are low, do people have a  grocery store nearby or transportation to one? Are there farmer’s  markets nearby? Do consumers have the knowledge, facilities, or time to  prepare healthy meals?

Though the data shows some increase in sales of healthier food,  perhaps the increases are not as strong because of these additional  barriers.

“Much of the goal of this research is to see the impact on health  care costs or if taxes or subsidies help reduce diabetes or obesity,”  Andreyeva says. “Do we see this reflected in health care costs?  Unfortunately, we don’t see that evidence yet because we haven’t had  enough time pass since subsidies or taxes have been implemented. One day  we hope to see when money is spent on subsidies, we can see savings  elsewhere. Hopefully, we will be able to show policymakers how much of  an impact increasing taxes or providing subsidies has on health.”

Source: https://today.uconn.edu/2022/06/can-food-taxes-and-subsidies-help-improve-health-outcomes/

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