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Britain
Considers Obesity
Levy on Fast Food Firms
Britain is considering imposing
levies on fast food firms to fund sports facilities and combat
obesity, the government said.
"We are looking at a number of
ways of increasing sport in the context of the government's anti-obesity
initiative," a Department for Culture, Media and Sport spokesman
said.
Governments and food firms have
been criticized for failing to combat obesity in Britain and the
United States, where as many as two-thirds of the population are
considered overweight. In Britain, 47 percent of men and 33 percent
of women are overweight and nearly a quarter of both sexes are
obese.
A spokeswoman for the Food and
Drink Federation, whose members include the world's largest confectioner
Cadbury Schweppes and soft drinks giant Coca-Cola, said the government
had yet to raise the issue of levies.
"Obviously if they were, we would
consider it along with other suggestions," she said, adding, "We
have written to the government and offered that we should talk
more."
If the levies were imposed, funds
would be used to build sports facilities around the country, the
government spokesman said, adding: "It remains the case that improving
the nation's health and tackling obesity are key government objectives."
According to a May 27 parliamentary
report, obesity in Britain has grown by almost 400 percent in
the last 25 years and if allowed to continue would surpass smoking
as the greatest cause of premature loss of life.
The report predicted increased
levels of diabetes, cancer and heart diseases, and attacked the
government for failing to formulate policies on obesity that linked
food, transport, education, health and work.
Activists in the United States
are also trying to hold the food industry to account for the population's
expanding waistline. Consumer lobby groups argue that shrewd and
costly marketing have influenced U.S. eating habits and contributed
to a rising rate of obesity.
In a sign of their concern at growing
public scrutiny, top U.S. foodmakers and restaurant chains, from
McDonald's Corp to Kraft Foods Inc, have been changing they way
they serve meals and reformulating the nutritional contents of
some foods.
Reference
Source 89
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