The Economic and Health Impact of a Tax on Sugar Sweetened Beverages (SSBs) in South Africa

Charity Gomo, Laura Birg
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Abstract

Background/Objectives: The increased consumption of sugar sweetened beverages (SSBs) has been associated with risks of obesity, and corresponding risks of type 2-diabetes, cancer, and cardiovascular disease. In order to reduce the intake of these beverages, the South African government has recently introduced a tax on SSBs. Methods: This paper evaluates the economic and health impact of the recently introduced tax on sugar sweetened beverages in South Africa, by constructing a microsimulation model using the South African Income and Household Survey (IES 2010/11) as the main data set. Results and conclusion: The overall results indicate that a 10 % SSB tax will lead to a substantial reduction in consumption of carbonated soft drinks by about 27% and minor reductions in other SSB categories. Results also indicate that the 10% SSB tax can generate about ZAR 14.5 billion (USD 1.08 bn) in government tax revenue annually. In addition, simulation results show that the SSB tax would result in an average reduction in energy intake by 16.97 kj/person/day.
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南非对含糖饮料(SSBs)征税的经济和健康影响
背景/目的:含糖饮料(SSBs)消费量的增加与肥胖风险以及相应的2型糖尿病、癌症和心血管疾病风险相关。为了减少这些饮料的摄入,南非政府最近对ssb征税。方法:本文以南非收入和家庭调查(IES 2010/11)为主要数据集,构建微观模拟模型,评估南非最近引入的含糖饮料税对经济和健康的影响。结果和结论:总体结果表明,10%的SSB税将导致碳酸软饮料的消费量大幅减少约27%,其他SSB类别的消费量略有减少。结果还表明,10%的SSB税每年可产生约145亿兰特(10.8亿美元)的政府税收收入。此外,模拟结果表明,SSB税将导致能量摄入平均减少16.97 kj/人/天。
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