
The World Health OrganizationĀ is pushing countries to raise the prices of sugary drinks,Ā alcohol and tobacco by 50 per cent over the next 10 years throughĀ taxation, its strongest backing yet for taxes to help tackleĀ chronic public health problems.
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The United Nations health agency said the move would helpĀ cut consumption of the products, which contribute to diseasesĀ like diabetes and some cancers, as well as raising money at aĀ time when development aid is shrinking and public debt rising.
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“Health taxes are one of the most efficient tools we have,”Ā said Jeremy Farrar, WHO assistant-director general of healthĀ promotion and disease prevention and control. “It’s time toĀ act.”
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The WHO launched the push, which it is called “3 by 35” atĀ the UN Finance for Development conference in Seville, Spain.
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WHO said that its tax initiative could raise $1 trillion US byĀ 2035 based on evidence from health taxes in countries such asĀ Colombia and South Africa.
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The WHO has backed tobacco taxes and price rises forĀ decades, and has called for taxes on alcohol and sugary drinksĀ in recent years.Ā But this is the first time it has suggested aĀ target price rise for all three products.
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WHO Director-General Dr.Ā Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told theĀ conference that the taxes could help governments “adjust to theĀ new reality” and bolster their own health systems with the moneyĀ raised.
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Many low and middle-income countries are coping with cuts toĀ aid spending led by the United States, which is not attendingĀ the Seville conference. The U.S. is also in the process ofĀ withdrawing from the WHO.
Raise prices from $4 to $10?
As an example, the initiative would mean a government in aĀ middle-income country raising taxes on the product to push theĀ price up from $4 today to $10 by 2035, taking into accountĀ inflation, said WHO health economist Guillermo Sandoval.
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Nearly 140 countries had already raised tobacco taxes andĀ therefore prices by over 50 per centĀ on average between 2012 and 2022,Ā the WHO added.
Sandoval said the WHO was also considering broader taxationĀ recommendations, including on ultra-processed food, after theĀ agency finalizes its definition of that type of food in theĀ coming months. But he added that the agency expected pushbackĀ from the industries involved.
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The initiative is also backed by Bloomberg Philanthropies,Ā the World Bank and the Organization for Economic Co-operationĀ and Development (OECD), and involves support for countries whoĀ want to take action.Ā