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Fiscal measures to improve diet

Fiscal measures to improve diet. Martin O’Connell. People are usually in the best position to make consumption decisions. For most products people are generally able to determine whether consumption is in their best interests But for certain products this may not always be the case

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Fiscal measures to improve diet

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  1. Fiscal measures to improve diet Martin O’Connell

  2. People are usually in the best position to make consumption decisions • For most products people are generally able to determine whether consumption is in their best interests • But for certain products this may not always be the case • e.g. tobacco and alcohol • Is it also true for food products?

  3. Information problems? • There are some reasons to believe people do not have the right information • Achieving a balanced diet is complex • There is evidence that in some cases people are poorly informed • Certain types of people are more likely to be less well informed • On the other hand many others are likely to make informed decisions • Extent of information problems among adults is unclear • But children are one particular group of concern • Firms often take advantage of people’s lack of information • e.g. fast food advertising aimed specifically at children

  4. What are the policy options? • Information provision • Obvious policy response • Successful in other areas (e.g. campaign against drunk driving) • But message required in food markets is more complicated • And information requirements and receptiveness are highly variable across different people • Regulation • Policies that seek to change prices (taxation) …

  5. Taxing unhealthy food products • The idea is that increasing the price of unhealthy products will encourage people to switch to healthier alternatives • Extent of switching will depend on • Size of the price increase • The availability of easily substitutable products • How much people like the taxed product • Impact of any given tax is uncertain • Will depend on whether consumption is driven by • Lack of information • Or love of the product

  6. Firms might not pass the tax fully to prices • Size of price increase depends on how firms respond • Firms will base their pricing decision on the effect on their profits • Often they will respond to the introduction of a tax by increasing prices by less than the tax • This will diminish the ability levying a tax has to change people’s behaviour

  7. Some other issues • Must decide what to tax • Calories • Fat, Salt, Sugar, … • ‘Unhealthy’ food products • Firms may also respond in other ways • e.g. to avoid a nutrient tax they may reformulate existing products or introduce new products

  8. Summary • Information problems in the market for food provides a potential rationale for government intervention • Policies that improve consumer information seem well suited to the problem, but it is difficult to reach all consumers with the appropriate message • Fiscal measures may also help change behaviour, but how firms, as well as consumers, respond is key

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