When Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said New Zealand would not join the countries that are signing up for a war against drugs – as championed by US President Donald Trump – she said her government has an agenda that is focused on addressing issues around drug use.
“We have a number
of challenges that are quite specific to New Zealand and the type of drugs that
are present, but also I’m taking a health approach.
“We want to do
what works, so we are using a strong evidence-base to do that.”
Whether she will
similarly use a strong evidence base to decide on how to reduce sugar
consumption is a moot point.
Questioned a
year ago by Mike Hosking on Newstalk ZB, she said reducing sugar is a
priority of the new government.
Asked by Hosking
if she backed a sugar tax, she said she is in support of limiting sugar in New
Zealand foods.
“We’ve backed
reducing sugar in our foods, in fact most Kiwis I think would support that,”
she said.
“I know we’ve got
a problem, and I think people would be surprised by how much sugar is being
placed in everyday items.”
Ardern said a
broader approach was needed to be fully effective.
“One of the issues
we’ve had though, is people have always promoted the idea of a tax on sugary
drinks as being the answer, but actually the increasing use of sugar is across
a number of food items, not just drinks.”
Ardern said the
government would not rule out a sugar tax but other options would be
considered.
Eleven months
later, the New Zealand Herald published the advice provided to Ardern in
February in
a briefing from the Ministry of Health’s chief science advisor, Dr John Potter.
Potter is a
professor at the Centre for Public Health Research at Massey University.
Each of 19 bullet
points in the document unequivocally helped make the case for a tax on sugar
sweetened beverages.
In the document,
released under the Official Information Act, Potter said:
“The Finnish tax
on confectionery, ice cream and SSBs showed a continuing decline in consumption
of high-sugar products with the imposition of steadily increasing taxes over
consecutive years.
“Most crucially,
the recent Berkeley, USA study showed clearly that a tax of one per cent per
30gm decreased consumption of SSBs in low-income communities and increased
consumption of water.”
Potter’s advice is
that a tax of 20 per cent has been shown to work, but it should be based on
volume or sugar content, not value.
“Reduction of consumption via a tax will probably be greatest among
the households with the lowest disposable income. In New Zealand, Māori and
Pacific will benefit strongly.”
Suspiciously
supportive figures were injected into the paper.
Over time a tax
could save 50 lives a year and save at least $6 million in health costs.
It would raise about $40m in revenue.
Potter advised a
sugar tax could be an evidence-based “anchor” in a comprehensive
strategy, including restrictions on marketing to children, education and safer
biking routes.
Before the Herald
flushed this advice into the public domain, Health
Minister Clark had hired a fellow described as one of New Zealand’s most
vocal advocates for a sugar tax as an advisor in his office.
According to this
Herald report:
His appointment
comes as pressure grows on the Government to slap a tax on sugary products,
with two DHBs calling for sugary drinks to be made more expensive.
Beaglehole –
dubbed the “anti-sugar man” in one media profile – has been a long-standing
advocate of such a measure and was the dental officer of health for
Nelson-Marlborough DHB.
Eric Crampton,
chief economist with The New Zealand Initiative in Wellington, has been
monitoring the sugar-tax champions and their arguments.
Last week he
described Potter’s bullet points as “some rather shoddy advice” on
the effects of sugar taxes.
None of the two
pages of unreferenced bullet points mentioned the comprehensive literature
review commissioned by the ministry, undertaken by the NZIER, and released by
the ministry just a few days before Potter provided his list of bullet points.
Crampton accordingly asked asked the ministry for more information
about the process around the chief science advisor’s advice to the Prime
Minister:
- Did any request from Sir Peter
Gluckman’s office for that advice run through the Ministry of Health? If
it did, please provide any documentation around it.
- Did Chief Science Advisor John
Potter’s reply to Sir Peter’s office, addressed to the Prime Minister, run
through any quality assurance process at the Ministry of Health? If so,
please provide any documentation produced as part of that quality
assurance process.
- At what point did the Ministry of
Health become aware that Dr Potter was producing this advice for the Prime
Minister? How did it become aware that this advice was being produced?
- Please provide any documentation, including
but not limited to internal emails, meeting notes, and recollections of
relevant officials [particularly the economics team at the Ministry], of
any discussions within the Ministry of Health about:
- The quality of John Potter’s
advice;
- That advice’s consistency with
prior Ministry advice regarding sugar taxes;
- The process by which this advice
was requested and produced.
- Does the Ministry of Health view it
as appropriate that advice was provided to the Prime Minister on sugar
taxes by the Ministry of Health’s Chief Science Advisor with no reference
whatsoever to the work that the Ministry had received from NZIER in August
2017 and that the Ministry had released under the Official Information Act
only 17 days prior to Potter’s note? Is this the kind of thing that the
Ministry views as good practice and process? If not, what processes if any
has the Ministry undertaken to ensure that advice produced by its Chief
Science Advisor goes through any kind of quality assurance process?
The Ministry’s
response – Crampton complained – “is absurdly lame”. It says:
“I can advise that
the request for advice was made directly to Professor Potter by the Prime
Minister’s Chief Science Advisor. Professor Potter prepared a succinct summary
note in response. It was not intended as a stocktake of all available evidence.
“The Ministry of
Health became aware of Professor Potter’s note on 20 August 2018 when the
Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet consulted us about its release
under the Act. I have identified one email chain in scope of this part of your
request. This is enclosed, with some material redacted … to protect the privacy
of natural persons.
“At the time,
officials recall that Professor Potter’s note drew different conclusions about
the benefits of taxing sugar-sweetened beverages from the study undertaken by
NZIER. This is not unexpected as taxing sugar-sweetened beverages is a
contested area.
“The Ministry
welcomes debate on these types of complex health issues, including the interpretation
of evidence and best practice.
“The role of the
Chief Science Advisor is to provide independent comment and advice on matters
related to the health and disability sector. The Ministry supports Professor
Potter providing information and advice to a range of stakeholders in keeping
with his role as Chief Science Advisor.
Crampton comments:
The first the
Ministry knew about Potter’s note was when it was being released under
OIA. MoH noticed that it varied from the advice the Ministry
commissioned. But if the Chief Science Advisor chooses to ignore that report
and produce a one-sided, distorted view of things for the Prime Minister’s
consumption, they seem cool with that. How completely lame.
Crampton is sure
Potter would have seen the NZIER report before producing his bullet points. He
has lodged another OIA request to confirm this.
The NZIER report
to the Ministry of Health, by the way, is
titled Sugar taxes – A review of the evidence.
After reviewing
the literature, the authors found:
• Taxes do
generally appear to be passed through to prices and some reduced demand is
likely
• Estimates of reduced intake are often overstated due to methodological flaws and incomplete measurement
• Price elasticities from early studies with fundamental methodological flaws have later been used in a number of other studies to assess the impact of sugar taxes, resulting in significantly overestimated reductions in demand
• There is insufficient evidence to judge whether consumers are substituting other sources of sugar or calories in the face of taxes on sugar in drinks
• Studies using sound methods report reductions in intake that are likely too small to generate health benefits and could easily be cancelled out by substitution of other sources of sugar or calories
• No study based on actual experience with sugar taxes has identified an impact on health outcomes
• Studies that report health improvements are modelling studies that have assumed a meaningful change in sugar intake with no compensatory substitution, rather than being based on observations of real behaviour.
• Estimates of reduced intake are often overstated due to methodological flaws and incomplete measurement
• Price elasticities from early studies with fundamental methodological flaws have later been used in a number of other studies to assess the impact of sugar taxes, resulting in significantly overestimated reductions in demand
• There is insufficient evidence to judge whether consumers are substituting other sources of sugar or calories in the face of taxes on sugar in drinks
• Studies using sound methods report reductions in intake that are likely too small to generate health benefits and could easily be cancelled out by substitution of other sources of sugar or calories
• No study based on actual experience with sugar taxes has identified an impact on health outcomes
• Studies that report health improvements are modelling studies that have assumed a meaningful change in sugar intake with no compensatory substitution, rather than being based on observations of real behaviour.
The NZIER
conclusion was brief and blunt: the evidence that sugar taxes improve health is
weak.
Bob Edlin is a veteran journalist and editor
for the Point of Order blog HERE.
1 comment:
A tax on sugar consumed by the poor is an ideal way of raising revenue to subsidise the good things in life enjoyed by the rich. Labour does this every time they get into office and is now joined in this by the Greens, bless their privilege supporting souls.
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