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Why is Colombia Taxing Sugary Drinks and Processed Foods? – News18


Last Updated: November 02, 2023, 08:27 IST

Food that contains approximately 5,200 calories that Pricila, 18, used to consume in one day before taking part in a weight loss program, is displayed for a photograph at her family home in Acolman, Mexico, January 12, 2021. (Reuters File Photo)

Colombia’s new tax on sugary drinks and ultraprocessed foods aims to combat obesity. Learn about the policy’s goals, industry challenges, and regional context

Colombia on Wednesday began levying a tax on sugary drinks and ultraprocessed foods, a policy designed to reduce soaring rates of obesity. The tax, approved by Congress at the end of 2022 and upheld by the Constitutional Court in the face of multiple legal challenges, will scale up from 10 percent through the rest of 2023, to 15 percent in 2024 and on to 20 percent in 2025.

“This is not to take money from you. This is so that you choose healthy foods and improve the health of the Colombian people,” President Gustavo Petro posted on his account on X, formerly Twitter. Products high in salt and trans fats, like cold cuts, chocolates and puffed grain cereals, are affected by the new tax as well as sodas, processed juices and energy drinks blamed for worsening diabetes and cardiovascular diseases.

The sugar industry in Colombia employs 286,000 people, and after the new tax was approved sugar barons hit back with multiple lawsuits. But the Constitutional Court this year ruled that the tax “does not infringe principles of equality, economic freedom or free markets.”

In 2015, some 56 percent of Colombian adults between 18 and 64 years of age were overweight, according to official figures. Several other Latin American nations have levied taxes on sugary drinks as a public health policy.

Mexico imposed a one peso surcharge on each liter of sugary drinks in 2014, and Ecuador followed suit in 2016 and Peru in 2018 with their own higher taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages.

(This story has not been edited by News18 staff and is published from a syndicated news agency feed – AFP)



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