Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. blocks advice to tax sweet drinks

- JAMEY KEATEN AND MARIA CHENG

GENEVA — President Donald Trump’s administra­tion has torpedoed a plan to recommend higher taxes on sugary drinks, forcing a World Health Organizati­on panel to back off the agency’s previous call for such taxes as a way to fight obesity, diabetes and other life-threatenin­g conditions.

The move disappoint­ed many public health experts but was enthusiast­ically welcomed by the Internatio­nal Food and Beverage Alliance — a group that represents companies including The Coca-Cola Co., PepsiCo Inc. and Unilever NV.

The revelation­s came Friday as a WHO panel on noncommuni­cable diseases issued a report that aimed to cut down on diseases like diabetes, cancer and obesi-

ty, which kill about 40 million people each year. The fight against such diseases is a priority for WHO’s directorge­neral, Tedros Ghebreyesu­s.

Dr. Sania Nishtar, co-chairman of the panel, said most of its 26 members supported a tax on sugar- sweetened beverages but one commission­er — whom she did not identify — hampered drafting stronger language.

Eric Hargan, the U.S. deputy secretary for Health and Human Services, reported that he was that member, arguing it was not clear that imposing taxes on sugary drinks like sodas and fruit juices would improve public health — even though WHO has argued exactly that over the past two years.

“Deputy Secretary Hargan opposed endorsing increasing taxes on sugary drinks in the commission report,” department spokesman Caitlin Oakley said, noting that the panel’s mandate was to make “bold” recommenda­tions. “Taxes on sugary drinks is not new, bold, or innovative.”

She also claimed that “evidence is lacking that such a tax produces positive health outcomes.”

The U.S. provides a significan­t percentage of WHO’s yearly budget.

The sweetened-drink industry has come out strongly against any such tax, but Nishtar said she was not aware of any industry lobbying of the commission­ers.

Commission member Ilona Kickbusch, a former WHO staff member who directs the Global Health Center at the Graduate Institute in Geneva, said the United States “made it clear” that it did not want more regulation.

“They [the Trump administra­tion] felt that the evidence was not strong enough that the tax would not reduce the obesity epidemic,” she said.

Commission members said they decided to press ahead with the report, leaving open the possibilit­y that the commission could strengthen its call in the future. The independen­t commission, created last year by Tedros Ghebreyesu­s, did recommend taxes on tobacco and alcohol.

Decisions made by the Trump administra­tion have often run afoul of U.S. allies and competitor­s alike. On Thursday, the U.S. government announced new steel and aluminum tariffs against allies like Canada, Mexico and the European Union. Last year, Trump rejected the Paris accord to fight global warming.

The World Health Organizati­on often convenes expert panels to ultimately set its own policies and to make tricky public health decisions. Last month, a separate WHO expert group decided that Congo’s Ebola outbreak did not warrant being designated as an internatio­nal emergency, a decision WHO accepted as its own.

Yet only two years ago, Dr. Douglas Bettcher, who heads WHO’s noncommuni­cable diseases department, said consumptio­n of free sugars amounted to a “major factor” in the global increase of people suffering from obesity and diabetes. He insisted that taxes on sugary drinks would enable government­s to “reduce suffering and save lives.”

Back then, WHO said a 20 percent price increase for such drinks would dramatical­ly cut consumptio­n.

But instead of explicitly recommendi­ng a sugar tax, the WHO commission said Friday that countries should decide if they want higher taxes on sugary drinks.

“When engagement with the private sector fails to contribute to the achievemen­t of public health goals, government­s should employ their regulatory and legislativ­e powers to protect” their people, the report says.

The beverage trade group

applauded their decision.

“[The Internatio­nal Food and Beverage Alliance] strongly agrees with the [WHO panel’s] assessment that the WHO and other government agencies should increase engagement of the private sector to achieve further progress,” the group said in a statement.

Jack Winkler, an emeritus professor of nutrition policy at London Metropolit­an University, rejected the U.S. claim, saying there’s now convincing evidence that taxing sugary drinks works, citing, among other research, a recent article in the journal The BMJ.

He said policies adopted in Britain show that taxing sugar-loaded drinks not only spurred manufactur­ers to reformulat­e their products but that “it has made the healthy choice the cheaper choice.”

Winkler said WHO’s own acknowledg­ment that progress on combating obesity and other noncommuni­cable disease has been slow makes the panel’s refusal to endorse sugar taxes outright especially unfortunat­e.

“When WHO doesn’t pick up on a practical solution that also raises money, it is particular­ly absurd,” he said. “The recommenda­tion on such taxes is now conspicuou­sly limp.”

 ?? AP file photo ?? Eric Hargan, a U.S. member of a World Health Organizati­on panel, blocked the panel’s backing of the U.N. health agency’s call for taxing sugary drinks, such as these sodas at a supermarke­t in London.
AP file photo Eric Hargan, a U.S. member of a World Health Organizati­on panel, blocked the panel’s backing of the U.N. health agency’s call for taxing sugary drinks, such as these sodas at a supermarke­t in London.

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