Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Philly soda tax study sees sales dip, health impact unclear

- By Lindsey Tanner AP Medical Writer

A new study bolsters evidence that soda taxes can reduce sales, but whether they influence health remains unclear.

The research found that Philadelph­ia’s 2017 tax led to a 38 percent decline in sugary soda and diet drink sales that year, even when taking into account an increase in sales in neighborin­g towns.

The results echo previous studies in Philadelph­ia, Berkeley and other places that have imposed beverage taxes, although the sales decline was larger than in some previous research. Unlike studies in Berkeley and Mexico, nontaxed drink sales didn’t increase during the study, “suggesting consumers were not substituti­ng with these drinks in Philadelph­ia,” the researcher­s said.

The new results were published Tuesday in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n. Bloomberg Philanthro­pies, a charitable group that supports anti-obesity measures including soda taxes, paid for the study but otherwise had no role in the research.

While Americans’ soda intake has declined in recent years, physician groups including the AMA support soda taxes as a way to combat obesity. The beverage industry and many merchants have fought back, with court cases and ballot initiative­s, with mixed success. Last year, Pennsylvan­ia’s highest court upheld Philadelph­ia’s tax, which is levied on distributo­rs.

Philadelph­ia’s tax has generated more than $130 million that’s paying for free preschool programs and other community services. The study has no data on beverage consumptio­n or obesity rates, but lead author Dr. Christina Roberto of the University of Pennsylvan­ia says the sales decline suggests Philadelph­ians are drinking less soda and is a promising sign.

“I think it’s well on its way to accomplish­ing its goal” of funding preschool programs and other city projects, said Roberto, an assistant professor of medical ethics and health policy. “It has this side benefit of reducing purchasing of these unhealthy drinks. It’s win-win news for public health.”

The new results are based on sales at nearly 300 supermarke­ts, big box stores and pharmacies in Philadelph­ia and its Pennsylvan­ia suburbs. The researcher­s also looked at Baltimore, which doesn’t have a soda tax, for comparison purposes.

They tracked sales starting in January 2016, the year before the 1.5-centsper-ounce tax was imposed, through December 2017. Per-ounce soda prices in Philadelph­ia increased by 1.56 cents at pharmacies, .87 cents at big box stories, and .65 cents at supermarke­ts. Sales volume decreased by 1.3 billion ounces in Philadelph­ia, or about 50 percent, but that dropped to 38 percent when counting a 308 million-perounce sales volume increase in bordering communitie­s, where prices were nearly unchanged. Soda sales prices edged up and soda sales volume dipped slightly in Baltimore.

Despite uncertaint­y over the potential health benefits, a journal editorial says there’s enough supporting evidence “to move forward with adoption of taxes while continuing to monitor outcomes.” The editorial authors include Dr. James Krieger, a public health physician and executive director of Healthy Food America, an advocacy group that supports soda taxes and other measures aimed at curbing America’s junk food habit.

William Dermody, a spokesman for the American Beverage Associatio­n, said the study conflicts with other evidence suggesting a bigger effect from cross-border shopping for untaxed drinks outside of Philadelph­ia. U.S. drinkmaker­s are reducing sugar in their products and creating smaller bottles and cans — steps he said make more sense than taxes to help Americans cut their sugar intake.

Soda taxes “hurt working families, small local business and their employees,” he said.

The tax has become a flashpoint in the run-up to the May 21 Philadelph­ia mayoral primary. Mayor Jim Kenney’s two Democratic challenger­s have derided the tax as regressive and are calling for it to be repealed.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM, FILE ?? A sweetened beverage tax sign is posted by bottles of drinks at a supermarke­t in the Port Richmond neighborho­od of Philadelph­ia.
AP PHOTO/MATT SLOCUM, FILE A sweetened beverage tax sign is posted by bottles of drinks at a supermarke­t in the Port Richmond neighborho­od of Philadelph­ia.

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