2111 2005 diet and health issues in europe: the case of norway kyrre rickertsen paper presented at...
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21112005
Diet and Health Issues in Europe: The Case of Norway
Kyrre RickertsenPaper presented at the conference: “Food Safety, Health and Diet: Trans-
Atlantic Challenges” organized by the European Union Center of Excellence at Texas A&M University, College Station, April 20, 2007
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Overview• Briefly about the development of the Norwegian nutritional policy
• Current nutritional policy (2007)
• Targets
• Strategies used to implement targets
• Predicted effects of taxes and subsidies on the consumption of (based on joint work with Geir W. Gustavsen):
• Vegetables
• Milk
• Sugar-sweetened carbonated soft drinks (SSCSD)
• Candy
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The Development of a Nutritional Policy
After World War II: Provide the population with a sufficient and nutritionally satisfactory diet
First country in the world with a nutritional policy. Established in 1975 in the document: “About Norwegian Nutritional and Food Security Policy”
– Main nutritional objective: Reduce the intake of (saturated) fats and increase the intake of carbohydrates
Followed up with documents in 1981, 1993, and 2007
These documents are joint policy documents involving (among others) the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Health with partly conflicting interests
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European and US Diets around Year 2000Annual per Capita Consumption in kilograms/liters (imprecise
disappearance data). Norwegian figures for 1980 in the parentheses
Product France Germany Norway US
Meat 88 93 60 (52) 92
Fish and shellfish 25 14 25 (22) 7
Fats and oils 22 29 17 (20) 30
Grains and cereals 88 76 122 (106) 92
Fruits and vegetables (incl. potatoes)
253 213 (193) 326
Fluid milk 69 88 129 (166) 86
Carbonated soft drinks
43 82 115 197
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Results of the Nutritional Policy (and Other Factors)
As intended, the intake of fats was reduced:
– The consumption of whole milk was reduced from 143 liters to 43 liters
– The annual death rate from cardiovascular diseases was reduced from 550 to 320 (per 100,000) for males and from 463 to 370 for females over the period 1980 to 2005
As intended, the consumption of carbohydrates increased:
– Grains and cereals (about 15%) and fruits and vegetables (about 10%)
– Carbonated soft drinks (more than 100%), a not intended change!
Compared with other countries:
– High consumption of: Fish, grains and cereals and milk
– Low consumption of: Meat, fats and oils, fruits, and vegetables
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WHO (Fact Sheet, 2005) Reports European Obesity Rates (BMI > 30)
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Percentage of Population with BMI > 30 in the U.S.
11 12 13
21
2831
16 17 17
26
3133
1960-62 1971-74 1976-80 1988-94 1999-02 2003-04
Men Women
Source: Flegal et al., JAMA, Oct. 2002; Ogden et al., April 2006Copied from Variyam (2006)
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Percentage of Overweight Population (BMI > 25) by Country (OECD Health Statistics 2004 reported in Nayga, 2005)
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Percentage of Population with BMI > 3040-42 Years Old
Female / Male Currently about 15% of age
group have BMI > 30 Rapid increase since the early
1990s About 1-2% of 15 to 16 years
old have BMI>30 Obesity rates about half
among people with MSc as compared with people who have not completed high school
Diet, physical activities, (lack of sleep)?
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Costs of Overweight and Obesity
Direct costs (preventive, diagnostic, and treatment) as well as indirect costs (lost wages due to illness and premature deaths)
The costs (including welfare losses) associated with obesity are estimated to be 0.5 – 1 percent of GDP in the Nordic countries. Corresponds to about US$ 250 per capita and year in Norway
Obesity consumes 2 – 8% of health care budgets in European countries (OECD, 2005, Fact Sheet)
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Current Norwegian Nutritional Policy Stated in: “A Recipe for a Healthier Diet”
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Health Issues and Food Consumption I
The document focuses on the average diet:
– A direct link between the population’s average diet and the prevalence of diseases such as: type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, certain types of cancer and osteoporosis as well as other health problems
– An indirect link between the populations average diet and obesity, which increases the risk for diseases such as cardiac infarction, stroke, cancer, type 2 diabetes, and muscular and joint diseases. The emphasis on this indirect link is new in the Norwegian debate
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Health Issues and Food Consumption II
The document also focuses on the distribution of consumption and the diet of specific target groups:
– People with unhealthy consumption in general
– Children (to prevent unhealthy habits)
– Older people (reduced food intake may result in inadequate diet)
– Non-Western immigrants (high rates of obesity and diabetes 2)
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The Official Quantitative Targets I
Average consumption:
– Double the intake of fruits and vegetables
– Increase intake of whole grain bread and fish
Distribution of consumption with a 20% increase in the number of:
– People who daily consume vegetables (now about 63%)
– People who daily consume fruits ( now about 61%)
– People who consume fish at least once per week
– Young people who daily eat breakfast
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The Official Quantitative Targets II
Reduce average consumption of
– Fats. Recommended level 30% of energy intake (now 34%)
– Saturated fats. Recommended level <10% of energy intake (now 14%)
– Transfats. Recommended level <1% (at recommended level)
– Sugar. Recommended level <10% of energy intake (now 14%)
– Salt. Recommended level <5 grams per day (now 10 grams)
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The Official Quantitative Targets III
Distribution of consumption with a 20% reduction in the number of:
– Children and young people who daily consume sweets and candies
– People who daily consume sugar-sweetened soft drinks
– People who get more than 10% of the energy intake from sugar (now more than 80% of children aged 4 – 11 years get more than 10% of the energy intake from sugar)
– People who get more than 10% of the energy intake from saturated fats
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What is Needed? A Policy Mix!
Information?
– Campaigns are never well funded (typically less than 1 mill. $)
Regulation?
– Transfats
– Vending machines in schools
– Mandatory labeling
Free provisions?
– Fruits and vegetables in schools
– Low-fat milk and high-quality drinking water in schools
– School lunches?
Taxes and subsidies?
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Five Strategies to Improve the Diet I
In general, none of the strategies are very likely to substantially change the diet
The strategies represent few specific actions
S 1: Increase the availability of healthy food
– Co-operation with the food industry to develop and market healthy foods
– Increase sales of subsidized fruits, vegetables and milk in public schools (by information encouraging the participation of more schools and more students in each school in such programs)
– Encourage the counties and schools to “reduce the access to less healthy soft drinks” and “increase the access to water”
– Encourage more healthy eating at workplaces
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Five Strategies to Improve the Diet II
S 2: Increase the public information to improve consumers’ knowledge– Continue the work with a mandatory nutritional labeling
system
– Decide if Norway will follow EU-labeling rules
– In general, TV advertising targeted directly towards children is not allowed for radio and TV channels broadcasting from Norway. But many foreign broadcasters are popular and can advertise according to their national laws
– Evaluate if TV marketing and other marketing (Internet, magazines, stores, etc) for unhealthy foods aimed at children and youth should be further restricted by law. Currently they work on voluntary guidelines with the industry
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S 3: Increase the scientific knowledge among health workers and other providing nutritional information
– Education at different levels in the school system concerning health and nutrition should be improved
– More basic nutritional research and public health research related to the effects of food consumption on health outcomes
S 4: Improve the local co-operation between public and private partners
– Review guidelines for food in public institutions (e.g. kinder gardens, schools, homes for old people, jails, hospitals, etc)
S 5: Improve the preventive aspects in the public health services
Five Strategies to Improve the Diet III
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What Is Missing:A Stronger Price Policy?
Taxes and subsidies:
– Taxes or subsidies are not a part of the suggested strategies
– From 2007, the value added tax (VAT) is 14% for food and beverages and 25% for most other goods
– An additional (small) sugar tax (revenue about 180 mill $ in 2007)
– Foods are also taxed and subsidized through a very complicated agricultural policy system with very high import tariffs. This policy results in high prices for domestically produced foods (healthy or unhealthy)
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What Is Missing:A Better Labeling Policy
Current nutritional labeling system is not very informative neither for those asking for specific information nor for those who seek basic advises
– Required to list the ingredients in declining order (the main ingredients listed first, etc). Voluntary to reveal the exact nutritional content
– Have to list the nutritional content in nutritionally fortified foods
– Have to list nutritional supplements and preservatives in the food
– Can label a product as a “light” product if the energy content is reduced by at least 30% as compared with the original product
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Our Research (with Geir Wæhler Gustavsen)
Evaluate effects of removing or increasing the value added tax (VAT is currently 14%) on the purchases of healthy and unhealthy foods
Cross-sectional data from Norwegian purchase surveys
1986 – 2001 (1997)
15,700 – 20,500 households
Focus on households with low consumption of healthy products or high consumption of unhealthy products
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Our Research
Quantile regressions are used
Quantiles are points on the cumulative distribution function of a random variable
A household that purchases at the θth quantile of the purchase distribution buys more than the proportion θ of households and less than the proportion (1-θ)
– Thus at the 0.75th quantile, 75% of the households buy no more than does the specified household and 25% buys more
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Vegetables
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Effects of VAT Removal- Own-price elasticities are different in different quantiles- VAT removal would cost about $50 per household- Does not substantially increase purchases in low-consuming households. Will primarily benefit high-consuming households
Quantile 0.10 0.25 0.50 0.75 0.90 Tobit
Own-price elasticity
-0.15 -0.39 -0.42*** -0.36*** -0.40*** -0.44***
VAT removal, change %
1.49 3.86 4.16 3.56 3.96 4.36
VAT removal, change kg
0.06 0.58 1.25 1.85 3.25 1.66
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Milk
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Effects of VAT Removal- Own-price elasticities are different in different quantiles- VAT removal would cost about $48 per household- Increase purchases of low-consuming households but no significant effect in high-consuming households
Quantile 0.10 0.25 0.50 0.75 0.90 Tobit
Own-price elasticity
-1.81*** -0.52*** -0.02 0.11 -0.09 -0.05
VAT removal, change %
20.82 5.98 0.23 -1.27 1.04 0.58
VAT removal, change liters
2.08 2.33 0.17 -1.61 1.92 0.53
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Sugar-Sweetened Carbonated Soft Drinks (SSCSD)
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Effects of Doubling VAT- Own-price elasticities are different in different quantiles- Predicted decreases among heavy drinkers are questionable (insignificant own-price elasticities)- Predicted significant decreases among light and moderate drinkers
Quantile 0.35 0.50 0.75 0.90 0.95 Tobit
Own-price elasticity
-2.41** -1.65** -1.39*** -0.84 -0.88 -1.02
Doubling of VAT, change %
-25.6 -17.5 -14.7 -8.9 -9.3 -10.8
Doubling of VAT, change in l
-5.1 -6.8 -11.5 -13.9 -19.2 -6.2
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Candy
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Effects of Doubling VAT- Own-price elasticities are different in different quantiles- Will significantly reduce consumption in all the quantiles
Quantile 0.40 0.50 0.75 0.90 0.95 Tobit
Own-price elasticity
-1.49*** -1.23*** -0.71*** -0.67*** -0.62*** -1.67***
Doubling of VAT, change %
-15.79 -13.04 -7.53 -7.10 -6.57 -17.70
Doubling of VAT, change in kg
-0.49 -0.60 -0.88 -1.51 -1.94 -1.55
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Conclusions
The effects of taxes and subsidies vary across products
The effects of taxes and subsides are different among low-consuming and high-consuming households, i.e. QRs are useful
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Conclusions: VAT removal I
Vegetables
– Small or no effects on low-consuming households
– Stronger effects on high-consuming households
Milk
– Some effects among low-consuming households
– No effects among moderate- and high-consuming households
Candy
– Large effects among all households
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Conclusions: VAT Removal II
SSCSD
– Large effects except among really heavy drinkers (in the 0.90th and 0.95th quantiles)
– More than a 10 liters annual reduction in consumption likely
– Are the effects of a 10 liters reduction trivial?
– In one year, the weight gain resulting from such a reduction is about 0.50 kg (or 1 pound)
– But the weight gain adds up to about 5 kg over ten years