Britain's
Prime Minister David Cameron © Dan Kitwood / Pool / Reuters
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Prime Minister David
Cameron has shunned a controversial 20 percent tax on sugar aimed at addressing
obesity in Britain without even reading the official report backing the
measures. Campaigners have called the move a “stitch-up.” A report from Public Health England, teased to
the Commons Health Select Committee on Wednesday, demonstrated the tax would
discourage individuals from buying sugary food and beverages associated with
weight gain.
One
government source said Cameron considered the tax a “blunt weapon” which would
hit poor families and make food more expensive.
RT UK report continues:
But
activists claim Cameron has been dissuaded by corporations who would suffer if
the tax was implemented.
On
Wednesday evening it was revealed Cameron had hosted food giants Coca-Cola,
Mars, Nestle and others at Downing Street last year.
Obesity tax
was not an option for PM Cameron – UK Source
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“It
is crazy to rule out a sugar tax without even looking at the evidence the
government has commissioned,” said Tam Fri, from the National Obesity Forum.
“You
have to think he has been got at by an industry that doesn’t want him to tax
their products. If he made up his mind without waiting for the evidence
lobbying is involved.”
Celebrity
chef and pro-sugar tax campaigner Jamie Oliver echoed Fri’s sentiments, saying
the report was ignored because of “pressures exerted by the powerful food and
drinks lobby.”
Government
sources suggest Cameron will not consider putting the tax in place.
“We
think there are more effective ways of dealing with this issue than hitting
millions of families with higher taxes,” one source told the MailOnline.
Another
source said the tax was not an option for the PM.
“We
are not considering a sugar tax. The prime minister is very clear on this.
Public Health England might be interested in the idea – although it is not at
the top of their list – but they don’t have to consider the economic and
political issues.”
On
Wednesday, Public Health England’s (PHE) chief nutritionist Alison Tedstone
told MPs her organization backs the tax.
“The
higher the tax increase, the greater the effect,” she said.
“The
point of the tax is to nudge people away from purchasing these things and
toward purchasing things that are more consistent with a healthy balanced
diet,” she added.
She
said the review had examined evidence from other countries’ sugar reduction
policies, as well as experimental data about the impact of price changes in the
UK.
Last
week, Health Secretary Jeremy Hunt was accused of hiding the findings of the
PHE report.
The
Commons Health Select Committee questioned whether ministers opposed to the tax
exercised political pressure to prevent the release of the review.
The report was originally
due to be published last July, but was been held back for use in “ongoing
policy development” and will be made public later this year.
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