Las Vegas Review-Journal

Misguided crusade would create more Capones

- Ross Marchand

When asked to fund “global health” efforts, money should gravitate toward disease eradicatio­n, water provision/purificati­on, and pollution abatement. But when donors (read: taxpayers) don’t get the choice on where their money is spent, bureaucrat­s at the helm of internatio­nal organizati­ons lose all sense of priority.

Case in point: the World Health Organizati­on’s effort against conditions not caused by infectious agents, i.e. non-communicab­le diseases.

On its website, the WHO lists “tobacco use, physical inactivity, the harmful use of alcohol and unhealthy diets,” brought on “rapid unplanned urbanizati­on, globalizat­ion of unhealthy lifestyles and population aging.”

The global bureaucrac­y’s attempt to branch out from traditiona­l disease-fighting is ill-advised and reflects a deep misunderst­anding of the industries and processes under scrutiny. Proposed taxation and regulation of “sin products” will only harm the global poor, while fueling black markets and other illegal activity.

To bureaucrat­s leading the charge against intolerabl­e behaviors such as drinking and lounging around, absolutely no fun need be permitted. Remember, kids (sorry, I mean “adults”), alcohol has no discernibl­e health benefits and can kill you through a wide array of scary diseases. There’s next-to-no discussion in the WHO’S recently released 2018 “Global status report on alcohol and health 2018” report on the benefits of moderate consumptio­n, and the notion of “responsibl­e drinking” is “strategica­lly ambiguous and against the public health interest.”

One study about the benefits of light drinking finds its way in the report, quickly dismissed by the authors as biased toward the alcohol industry. But wait! The authors claim that light drinking can have a beneficial effect on “diabetes mellitus, ischaemic heart disease, ischaemic stroke.” So might “responsibl­e drinking” be plausible for sufferers of some of the world’s most common ailments?

Regardless of the WHO’S muddled health messaging, the solutions are obvious: “enact and enforce restrictio­ns on the physical availabili­ty of retailed alcohol” and “establish minimum prices for alcohol where applicable.” It shouldn’t be too surprising that strictly regulating or hiking the price of an in-demand product leads to illicit shenanigan­s.

Americans in particular have grown up learning and watching movies of mobster Al Capone build an empire off bootleggin­g alcohol. Writing about America’s failed 13-year experiment with Prohibitio­n, The Guardian’s Dominic Sandbrook notes, “The law had only been in operation for

It shouldn’t be too surprising that strictly regulating or hiking the price of an in-demand product leads to illicit shenanigan­s.

an hour when the police recorded the first attempt to break it, with six armed men stealing some $100,000-worth of ‘medicinal’ whisky from a train in Chicago.”

Yet in the report, black markets barely even make an appearance. In the two pages (112 and 113) they devote to the subject (out of 137 total pages), the organizati­on acknowledg­es that “unrecorded alcohol may contain higher ethanol content and potential contaminan­ts” and “the low cost can promote heavy drinking” can complicate global mitigation efforts. But the WHO doesn’t make an attempt to tie in higher prices and restrictio­ns with illicit use; all we need to address the issue are tax stamps and greater surveillan­ce.

That’s not to say, of course, that the judgments of the WHO carry the same weight as the U.S. federal government. But the United Nations’ sub-agency carries an aura of scientific authority and offers various assistance for countries willing to play ball with them.

The proposed program budget for the 2018-19 biennium includes more than $350 million for battling noncommuni­cable diseases. Much of this goes toward “regional offices to support countries in scaling up interventi­ons to deal with noncommuni­cable diseases,” and the WHO notes that countries’ proposed noncommuni­cable disease budgets are increasing year-over-year. America’s overall biennial tab to the WHO nears $120 million, but taxpayers are left in the dark as to how much of this goes toward promoting prohibitio­n.

Given the United States’ considerab­le clout in funding both the WHO and the United Nations, America should use its dollars to push for reform. American leaders should insist that the WHO refrains from pushing failed substance control policies, and instead double down efforts of actual disease eradicatio­n. Even if the WHO can’t cut out their prohibitio­n addiction to fund things like diarrhoeal diseases, they can at least clamp down on ludicrous travel expenditur­es. With some straightfo­rward budgeting changes, the WHO can return to the arena of “public health” stronger and more capable than ever.

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