Friday, May 29, 2009

Soda as Sin


As we work towards raising the NIH budget and improving the quality and quantity of research in this country, it’s important to think about how it can all be paid for - especially when we take into account the current health care reform proposal set to cost about $700 billion over 10 years. Given the current economic crisis, people are naturally curious about where the government is going to come up with $70 billion a year. One of the most intriguing possible solutions: a soda tax.

As anyone who was ever gone on a diet or attempted to begin a program of regular exercise knows, changing established behavior patterns is difficult even when you know it’s good for you (and sometimes because you know it’s good for you). So the appeal of the soda tax is two fold:
  1. It has the potential to provide significant revenue streams to help defray the cost of health care
  2. It will discourage people from drinking soda which will have a positive impact on health.
The question then becomes, what does a soda tax have to look like in order to dent the health care costs? And, assuming there is a drop in consumption that corresponds to the price increase, will it help America’s ever expanding waistline?

It’s helpful to compare soda with other items subject to a sin tax: cigarettes and alcohol.



Cigarettes recently underwent a 150% tax increase from $0.40 to $1.01 per pack, but even at the previous tax rate, federal revenues on cigarettes came to approx $15B in 2007. That’s both a lot of money and absolutely shocking number of cigarettes (assuming 20 cigarettes a pack, that’s 750 trillion and an entirely separate health problem).

Alcohol gets a tax rate that differs between beer, wine and spirits, but combined the sin tax brings in around $5B. If we use the beer tax of $0.05 as a guideline for a potential soda tax, we get some large numbers.

Last year Americans consumed 10.2B cases of soda (at 24 cans in a case thats 244,800,000,000 cans). Not diet soda mind you, the incredibly sugary (and better tasting if we’re honest) soda. If we apply the beer tax of $0.05 to this, we get $12.4B in revenue or 19% of President Obama’s proposed health care initiative. This doesn’t affect diet sodas, juices or iced tea. That’s 19% of the massive health care reform taken care of being charging you an extra nickel for your coke.

That's a ten percent increase on a can of soda bought in a 12-pack. In the past a 10% increase in the price of soda saw a decrease in consumption of as much as 8%. Now correlation is not causation, but it’s impossible to look at those numbers and not see that they’re linked.

The economically disadvantaged are most at risk for obesity and part of that is they are the leading consumers of soda. Soda is often the cheapest item in the store.



So, to some degree, the tax targets the economically disadvantaged. But, they stand to benefit the most from the proposed health care reform this kind of economic behavioral incentive is designed to support.

As for those who think this kind of economic incentive doesn’t work, try to remember that 42% of Americans smoked in 1965. 42%. While health awareness campaigns have certainly played a role in the decline, the rising cost of cigarettes (primarily due to taxation) has significantly contributed to the decline of American smokers.

We can’t begin to confront the obesity problem until we begin to confront the sources of that problem. It’s nice to encourage exercise and diet as a means of losing the weight, but the best medicine is the preventive kind. I think if we can cut soda consumption and pay for 19% of a reformed health care system, I say bring it on.

Besides, I’m a juice drinker anyways.


Sources:
All tax data taken from www.taxpolicycenter.org
Price data taken from www.peapod.com

4 comments:

  1. Thank you for an amazingly well thought out and well presented argument. This is great information!

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  2. As a confirmed diet soda drinker (I actually do like the taste substantially better than sugary sodas...), I'd actually be quite supportive of extending that tax to diet sodas as well. Although I wouldn't call them conclusive, there is data out there (See this Wall Street Journal article at http://tinyurl.com/dietsodaproblems, for example) that indicates the diet version of the soda may have negative health effects, as well. Besides, if there's a higher tax on regular soda, the soda manufacturers will simply do a better job developing diet versions of the sugary sodas they already sell. I already have plenty of friends raving about Coke Zero...and I assume PepsiCo and Coca Cola aren't the only companies working furiously in their labs to create the next big marketable thing.

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  3. Singling out soda seems arbitrary to me. Why soda, why not other high fructose corn syrup laden products? How do you justify just soda? If we are going to tax things that impact health and healthcare costs, we must apply it across the board in a fair manner. Wouldn't this be much more effective anyway? I must say that I also disagree with the "sin" concept in general...maybe if the religious connotations were removed, this kind of thing would be more palatable.

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  4. I think you make it about soda because that's going to have the most impact. You could tax milkshakes but there's not a lot money in it. We don't tax all alcohol products the same, so I don't see the need to tax all sugared beverages the same (although it has been discussed). As far as the use of the term "sin" goes, that is the general economic term for taxing goods such as alcohol and tobacco. I agree that it would be more effective to create a sugary drinks tax across the board, but that's far less likely to be politically feasible and I'd have this soda tax then no tax at all.

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