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United Kingdom considers tax on soft drinks

Reporter: Richard Bestic 丨 CCTV.com

11-14-2016 13:05 BJT

Around the world, 20 percent of adults will be obese in less than a decade, according to a WHO report. And there is no chance of hitting the U.N.’s goal of halting by 2025 obesity’s rapid rise. In Britain, the figures are worse, triggering government plans for a controversial tax on fizzy drinks.

“I’m not prepared to look back at my time here in this parliament, doing this job and say to my children’s generation, ‘I’m sorry, we knew there was a problem with sugary drinks, we knew it caused disease, but we ducked the difficult decisions and we did nothing,’” said former UK Finance Minister George Osborne.

The UK government has the support of health campaigners, who claim a 40 percent reduction of sugar in soft drinks over five years could prevent 300,000 cases of diabetes in the country. Sugar is a global health problem and should be treated as such.

“It is an absolutely massive global problem. It’s already a global problem in the UK, America and Mexico. We have the heaviest population or most obese populations in Europe,” said Professor Graham McGregor with Wolfson Institute of Preventative Medicines.

The soft drinks lobby, however, specifically uses the example of Mexico to counter UK government plans for a tax on sugary drinks. More than 70 percent of the Mexican population is deemed overweight or obese and government taxes have been introduced to change that—a strategy that has failed, according to the UK soft drinks industry.

“Where taxes have been introduced, the evidence suggests that they reduce calorie intake by just about six calories a day in the case of Mexico. That’s not going to address obesity, that’s not going to have a real impact,” said Gavin Partington, director of General UK Soft Drinks Association.

The UK government’s plan could be the subject of legal challenge, should it be claimed that the new tax disrupts the free flow of trade, while the industry already insists its reducing sugar content in its drinks.

The United Nations recognizes that diabetes and indeed obesity are two internationally growing problems. But, as the UK government has discovered, finding a solution to those problems is often easier said than done.

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