Monday, March 14, 2011

The BBC wants to tax the fat

tax the fat
The BBC is putting out a documentary about taxing sugar and other sweets as a method to make people lose weight (I’m not kidding).  Here’s the question they seek to answer: “Would putting up the price of junk food, high in sugar and fat, cut obesity rates in the same way as a tax on cigarettes has helped reduce smoking?”

This represents the over-riding popular view that all plus size women and men are fat because they eat nothing but junk.  This just isn’t the case.   The causes of obesity are far more complicated than the calories in/calories out model – weight gain can be caused by medication side-effects, medical problems such as diabetes and PCOS, sedentary lifestyles (office work, etc.), stress and depression.  Increasing taxation on food will not eradicate obesity.  Comparing tax on cigarettes to reduce smoking to a tax on food to reduce obesity doesn’t work.

This approach also implies that any health problems caused by poor diet affect only plus size women and men, which is simply not the case.   By labeling a tax on perceived ‘unhealthy’ foods a “fax tax” it’s adding to the stigma of being fat – and stigma itself contributes to stress and depression.

The fear-mongering of the media as to how much obesity-related diseases is causing harm in itself.   We find ourselves in a society where plus size women and men are increasingly viewed as of less value to thin or normal people and where health is determined not by medical tests but by BMI (by which measure professional athletes are often classified as obese).  Fat people need advice on how to improve their health that rests on more than “lay off the burgers, fatty” – we can reduce our risk of diabetes and heart disease without weight-loss and should be encouraged to try these rather than starvation diets or invasive surgery.

[Sourceaboutcurves.com:]


View the original article here

No comments:

Post a Comment