FOOD JUSTICE: Research shows voluntary commitments by big food companies on marketing unhealthy foods don’t work

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New research from Wits University’s Centre for Health Economics and Decision Sciences, just published in Nature Food, shows that voluntary commitments by major food and drinks companies to take actions in support of public health don’t work. And not ...

More specifically, the study found no evidence that VAs have a positive impact on public health – and, in addition, found that such commitments in fact have a damaging impact on governments’ taking action to put stricter regulations in place.

Safura Abdool-Karim, one of Erzse’s co-authors, and a lawyer, explained that, in trying to establish the actual, real-world outcomes of voluntary actions, they found that instead of having demonstrable public-health outcomes the VAs had “more of a policy substitution effect, or a weakening of governments’ ability to regulate”.

Abdool-Karim describes the highly concentrated control of South Africa’s food supply, and says, “they have created a narrative around things like the sugary-beverage tax that [they say] takes away consumer choice, takes away consumer freedom”. The same corporations are often producing both healthy and unhealthy foods – for example, minimally processed oatmeal and ultra-processed crisps.

 

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