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Tax reduces junk food consumption in Mexico, says study

Researchers at the University of North Carolina and the National Institute of Public Health in Mexico found that one year after a 2014 junk food tax, purchases of taxed foods fell 5.1 percent.

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Mike Hutmacher/The Wichita Eagle/AP
In this 2006 file photo, a student purchases a brown sugar Pop-Tart from a vending machine in the hallway outside the school cafeteria, in Wichita, Kan.

A recent聽聽by researchers at the University of North Carolina and the National Institute of Public Health in Mexico examines the first-year effects of a junk food tax implemented by the government of Mexico in 2014. The results show that there was an average reduction of 5.1 percent on purchases of taxed food items in 2014, which was equivalent to 25 grams per person per month. 聽

In Mexico, the government created an eight percent tax on high-calorie foods in an effort to deal with increasing rates of obesity and diabetes. According to the law,聽聽include chips, salty snacks, and frozen desserts. The government also implemented a聽聽on sugar-sweetened drinks. 聽

鈥淎pproximately 14 percent of Mexican kilocalorie consumption comes from these taxed foods,鈥 says聽, a professor at the University of North Carolina and one of the co-authors of the study. 聽

According to the study, the nonessential food tax managed to decrease purchases of junk food in low-income and medium-income households. The low-income households bought on average 10.2 percent less taxed foods. The medium-income households bought on average 5.8 percent less taxed foods. The purchases of junk food in high-income households did not change, according to the study. 聽

鈥淭his is the first rigorous, longitudinal evaluation of a junk food tax with detailed data on both taxed and untaxed foods,鈥 said聽, who is also a researcher at the University of North Carolina and one of the co-authors of the study.聽 聽

The study did not show if the tax influenced the overall behavior of the participants. It did not mention if the families bought healthier foods, decreased their calorie intake, or decided to purchase less expensive street food in Mexico. 聽聽

Mexico has聽聽rates of childhood and adult overweight and obesity in the world.聽聽and around聽聽are overweight and obese in Mexico. 聽

Globally, Mexico is the聽聽per capita consumer of energy dense foods and drinks. Around聽聽in the country had type-2 diabetes in 2012. The consumption of non-basic foods that contain high levels of sugar or fat represents聽聽of daily caloric intake, according to the 2012 National Health and Nutrition Survey. 聽

According to the researchers, more聽聽should be conducted to 鈥渆valuate the impact of taxes on overall energy intake, dietary quality, and food purchases patterns.鈥澛

This story originally appeared on .

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