COMM 292 Lecture 9: RIE ARTICLE
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COMM 292 Full Course Notes
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Taxing fat and subsidising healthy eating widens inequality. A study suggests lower-income families end up paying more for their food. In rich countries, people"s diets are getting worse and they are getting fatter. Hence the increasing popularity of a fat tax , to make unhealthy food cost more. Since hungary led the charge in 2011 with a chip tax on fatty and sugary foods, other countries have followed. Britain is to join a long list next year. Since the poor both spend a higher proportion of their income on food and tend to eat less healthily, they are the main targets of such taxes. In france, for instance, adult obesity is seen in over 20% of households with monthly incomes under 1,500 (,765) compared with less than 10% of those who earn over. But data on the impact of such policies are scarce.