UK campaigners suggest London soda tax

By Nathan Gray

- Last updated on GMT

Campaigners have suggested that a 20p per litre tax on sugary drinks will improve health and save money - but are such ideas realistic?
Campaigners have suggested that a 20p per litre tax on sugary drinks will improve health and save money - but are such ideas realistic?

Related tags Sugary drinks Nutrition

A suggested 20 pence per litre tax on sugary drinks in London would benefit health and save up to £39 million in healthcare, say campaigners. 

The levy, proposed by the Children’s Food Campaign, could reduce rates of diabetes, strokes, heart disease and bowel cancer in London by thousands say those behind the suggestion.

Indeed, it is estimated that the introduction of a 20 pence per litre duty on sugary drinks would save the NHS and public health budgets £39 million over twenty years.

“A duty on sugary drinks of 20 pence per litre would be the most practical and effective way of tackling a significant source of unnecessary calories and sugar in children and young people’s diets,” said ​Malcolm Clark, co-ordinator of the Children’s Food Campaign. “Mexico, France and Hungary have already introduced a sugary drinks duty, and their citizens are reaping the benefits.”

Clark warned that UK politicians “can no longer hide behind the idea that it wouldn’t be popular, or is an untried policy” – noting that CitizensUK, trade unions ‘and dozens of other organisations’ all support a duty.

According to research published in association with University of Liverpool academic Brendan Collins and FoodActive, if the UK government introduced a 20 pence per litre sugary drinks duty, then the impact in London over twenty years would be to reduce the cases of diabetes by over 630, prevent over 1100 cases of cancer, and reduce strokes and cases of coronary heart disease by over 4300.

A realistic option?

While the idea of a levy on sugary drinks is not new, it could be politically dangerous.

Indeed, leading politicians have already categorically stated that food taxes will not be put in place by the next UK government, while the current UK government’s back-tracking over its proposed ‘pasty tax’ after public outcry also suggests that future food taxes will not be successful.

“Jeremy Hunt for the Conservatives and Luciana Berger for Labour have both said explicitly, with a candour rare among British politicians before a General Election, that if they form the next government they will not impose any food taxes. Full stop,”​ said Professor Jack Winkler. “You cannot be clearer than that. It will not happen.

Winkler added that while he is ‘strongly in favour’ of using price instruments to aid nutritional objectives – the latest suggestions, like many before them, fail to balance taxation of ‘bad’ foods with lowering the price of ‘good’ foods.

He also noted the fact that soft drinks are among the most heavily promoted products on earth, means that a 20p per litre tax could ‘get lost amidst all the promotional razzamatazz,’ while previous modelling studies have shown that such a low tax would have very little effect on actual consumption levels.

Winkler also told us that, like many other public health groups, the new campaign does not mention the cases where food taxes have been rejected – which include not only the UK and Denmark, but also US cities, including Philadelphia, New York, San Francisco and Washington.
“After these negative experiences, no democratically elected politician in the UK is likely to risk proposing food taxes,”​ said the nutrition policy expert. “Which is why both Hunt and Berger have gone out of their was to disavow them.”

Despite these issues, Winkler said that he is in favour of food taxes in principle, but conceded that the fact that in many cases they are economically ineffective and politically unacceptable means that policy makers and campaigners need to be pragmatic.

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1 comment

Definition of Sugary Drinks Please

Posted by Anne Thomson,

Please can you define sugary drinks. Do you mean any drinks that contain added sugar? Or those that contain over x% sugar? What is x? Do you mean those that contain over a certain calorific value per 100ml? What would that level be? What is your definition of sugars? Do you include….

Agave Nectar
Barley Malt Syrup
Beet Sugar
Brown Rice Syrup
Brown Sugar
Cane Crystals (or, even better, "cane juice crystals")
Cane Sugar
Coconut Sugar
Corn sweetener
Corn syrup, or corn syrup solids
Dehydrated Cane Juice
Dextrin
Dextrose
Evaporated Cane Juice
Fructose
Fruit juice concentrate
Glucose
High-fructose corn syrup
Honey
Invert sugar
Lactose
Maltodextrin
Malt syrup
Maltose
Maple syrup
Molasses
Palm Sugar
Raw sugar
Rice Syrup
Saccharose
Sorghum or sorghum syrup
Sucrose
Syrup
Treacle
Turbinado Sugar
Xylose (List courtesy of http://lowcarbdiets.about.com/od/whattoeat/a/sugars.htm “Sugars Many Disguises”)
What about drinks which use apple juice or grape juice concentrate so that they are extremely sweet? Fruit juice concentrates sound wholesome, but usually the juices chosen, such as white grape, apple, and pear juices, are among the least nutritious of the juices. By the time they are “concentrated”, very little remains but the sugar.

All our juices and juice drinks contain < 29 kcal per 100ml whether this is supplied by a small addition of sugar to balance the berry astringency or from the fruit juices? Do you include these in your definition of sugary drinks?
Don’t get me wrong. I support moves to reduce sugar consumption. Our drinks are not sweet and are low sugar. I just think you need to be clear about what it is you are asking for. Artificial sweeteners are not the panacea either from a taste viewpoint or from a health viewpoint.

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