Financial News
Fat Tax On Sugary Drinks Urged By Doctors
Britain's doctors want the cost of sugary drinks increased by a fifth and a ban on unhealthy food in hospitals, according to reports.
The Academy of Medical Royal Colleges says the moves would help to break the cycle of "generation after generation falling victim to obesity-related illnesses and death".
The Guardian cited a report by the academy which says doctors are "united" in seeing obesity as the greatest public health crisis facing the UK.
The academy said government efforts so far have been "piecemeal and disappointingly ineffective", given the scale of the problem.
Figures show that one in four adults in England is obese. Obesity can lead to heart disease, cancer and diabetes.
The academy's chairman, Professor Terence Stephenson, said the report did not claim to offer a full solution to obesity, but "it does say we need together to do more, starting right now, before the problem becomes worse and the NHS can no longer cope".
Its recommendations include an experimental 20% tax on sugary soft drinks for at least a year, to see what effect it has on sales.
The academy believes the potential £1bn annual tax yield could help fund an increase in weight management programmes.
Local councils are also urged to limit the number of fast food outlets near schools and leisure centres.
And NHS staff should routinely talk to overweight patients about their eating and exercise habits, the report adds.
Chef and anti-obesity campaigner Jamie Oliver welcomed the report as "the clearest warning sign yet that the medical profession is deeply concerned about obesity".
But the Food and Drink Federation, which represents produce manufacturers, said the report was a "damp squib" that added "little to an important debate".
The British Soft Drinks Association said its products accounted for just 2% of calories in an average diet and it is what people consume overall that needs to be addressed.
Its director-general Gavin Partington said: "Over the last 10 years, the consumption of soft drinks containing added sugar has fallen by 9% while the incidence of obesity has been increasing, and 61% of soft drinks now contain no added sugar.
"Soft drinks companies are also committing to further, voluntary action as part of the Government's Responsibility Deal Calorie Reduction Pledge.
"Don't forget that there already is a 20% tax on soft drinks, 10p out of every 60p can of drink already goes to the Government thanks to VAT.
"Putting up taxes even further will put pressure on people's purses at a time when they can ill afford it," he added.
what do you think?

Lorgar Aurelian
That's fine. In that case I also want a 20% increase in appointment availability.

jimmyjedi1979
Good point! (hate you)

ann davies
its not up to the government or doctors what a person eats. its up to parenting and if parents want fat kids thats up to them to sort out the medical problems that comes with obesity . parents and schools should be making more use of the outside fresh-air for activity.

Paul Martin
This comment has been removed for violations of our Terms and Conditions.

michael
i gave up smoking a while ago and have been steadily putting on weight every week,i'm always on the go and don't drink sugary drinks what should i blame??

Brian Holmes
Well done. Your appetite improves when you stop smoking so you may simply be eating more of your normal diet. When I stopped I substituted a cup of tea and a biscuit and put on seven pounds. When I cut out the biscuits I lost it again. You have to eat something in order to gain weight, it just doesn't come from nowhere.

Mikel roi
Brian is absolutely right, Michael, well done for giving up the smoking addiction (I did years ago, thank goodness!) yes, improved appetite will put on a little more weight, now all you have to do is keep up the activity but cut back on the more fattening food intake.. Thousands have already succeeded in doing just that!

movvi
Blame the cakes! Well done for quitting the fags!

krafty81
Make healthy food cheaper then.

Mikel roi
At whose expense? The Farmers and their labourers? Or well produced quality fresh produce? The current adulterated processed food and miss-selling directly results from trying to provide the cheapest food. No thanks, fairly priced safe and nutritious food for me.

jimmyjedi1979
This is ridiculous. I haven't drank pop in years. I know its bad for me, but i should be free to decide what i want to drink without being penalized. Tax tax tax. Would you just leave us alone and stop telling us what to do! People need to realize this will always happen while we have communist parties like the labour party and the conservatives aren't much better. The only way forward these days is libertarianism. People should look into it. And the only libertarian party we have in the UK is UKIP. PERSONAL PERSONALITY! Small government less tax. Power and the right to choose what you spend your money on. Pop tax? Ha ha ha! They'd tax your farts if they could get away with it!

jimmyjedi1979
I mean PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY

Facebook User
Trump tax. Aye?

jimmyjedi1979
And you can't tax pop you can only tax people so really its another peoples tax.

Mikel roi
Yes, but no one person is an island. It's not the taxation that we pay for our essential and communal services that's wrong, it's the way it is being spent that needs to be urgently addressed. People are eating, smoking and drinking themselves into serious illness and we either just bump them off, or we have to pay to treat them. Where is the new money going to come from?? Also, please do not confuse the autocratic and dictatorial Labour & Conservative parties with the principles of communalism. More like let's gain power, look after ourselves and our mates and blow the rest of you!

executecodered
Just finished my customary 15 litres of Lucozade a day. Shove your tax.

Mikel roi
15 litres of that a day? May you RIP! Wouldn't touch it if I was dying of thirst in a desert!

Phil A
I notice they are not recommending doing things the other way around i.e. making healthy food and drinks cheaper than unhealthy ones. i wonder why? Anyone enlighten me?

Mikel roi
Simple answer to that Phil, put extra taxes on the unhealthy sugary and fatty, salty yucky fast foods etc., and the good stuff will soon appear much cheaper!

davenlesley
When all the alcoholic doctors, those who smoke and those who are vastly overweight put their house in order then they can start lecturing me, not until

Brian Holmes
It's always about tax. The Government has it's nose in every nook and cranny of our lives and everything they touch ends up with a cost to us. It is out of control.

Mikel roi
OK, we can carp about this suggestion all we like. But the fact remains, we only get one life! Abuse your health and you most definitely can lose that precious life, no if's or but's about it. Right or wrong, these Doctors are posting a warning. It affects us all - because even if you lead a healthy lifestyle - YOU will still have to pay to treat all those who don't! Anyone can change if they really want to, they just need to make up their minds, stop over eating, smoking and abusing drugs and alcohol and start exercising and eating sensibly. Watch this video if you want some inspiration to help achieve your goal:<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9BFx5Mhqo" rel='nofollow'>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ja9BFx5Mhqo</a> If you are addicted, just think who are you making very rich?

chrishearn350
How about extra alcohol tax to stop a lot of doctors becoming alcoholics !









Ben Ralph
6:05am on 18/2/2013
Unless there is an underlying medical complaint then the only reason for obesity is gluttony. What you going to do? Walk around with calipers and test people for bodyfat?