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Should junk food be taxed?

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Replies

  • Posts: 1,249 Member
    Dazzler21 wrote: »
    Extremely heavily.
    No change in opinion...
  • Posts: 1,249 Member
    Knokr wrote: »
    No! In cook county they raised alcohol tax and added a tax to any sort of sugary drink and it’s annoying but it doesn’t prevent me from buying anything.

    Is that because it's not an everyday purchase?

    Personally I think the increase in tax (were it to occur) would need to be coupled with a tax break on healthy foods and drinks.
  • Posts: 6,252 Member
    If they taxed the companies that produce it instead of the consumer, sure.

    Companies don't pay taxes....ever. This is always passed onto the consumer.
  • Posts: 208 Member

    If you're using "staple food" in the sense of a food eaten in such quantities that it forms a dominant portion of the diet, I don't know if making nuts/seeds a staple food for people will result in the population weighing less overall.

    So .. by staple foods I mean more like your fruit and veg .. I really do think they should reduce the cost of these types of foods to encourage more people to buy them
  • Posts: 2,862 Member

    So .. by staple foods I mean more like your fruit and veg .. I really do think they should reduce the cost of these types of foods to encourage more people to buy them

    not terribly likely to happen since we can't, you know, teleport food on demand from the farms. We do freeze and can fruits and vegetables to improve shelf life (and make them available and remotely affordable in the off-seasons), and selectively bred/engineered/treated what we can for improved shelf/transport life, ... but there's an obvious limit to how cheap we can feasibly make the fresh, perishable items required by food snobs.
  • Posts: 2,072 Member
    No. We pay enough in taxes already.
  • Posts: 4 Member
    "Healthy" food should be made more affordable. You can get fruit and veg reasonably cheap nowadays but god help you if you need anything else. Taxing in my opinion doesn't really work because the financial negative incentive doesn't really counteract the physical positive incentive. it's just another way for governments to make more money.
  • Posts: 651 Member
    edited June 2018
    Before taxing products, maybe we should consider whether or not we really need to subsidize agriculture products, and see if we can get good results by just letting everything cost the fair market value, instead of taking advantage of artificially low corn prices.
  • Posts: 339 Member
    I don't agree with taxing junk food, we pay too much in tax already, and the definition of "junk food" is too broad, at least to me. One man's junk is another man's treat, or treasure. However, I do agree with the people who say that we should decrease the price of healthy alternatives such as fruits and veggies. I think that most people would go for healthier options, if they were priced better. I know that I try and eat clean and healthy but it gets really expensive sometimes.
    Example I can go to McDonalds and get a cheeseburger meal for $5.99 (ish) or I can go to chopped leaf and get a salad for $14.00. If I'm on a budget but want a treat, or forgot lunch and am starving I'm probably going to pick McDonald's, just because of the cost. However, if the price of the salad was comparable to the burger I'd go for the salad every time.
    Not saying that everyone will do this, but I think that it would make a big difference to a lot of people if we could get healthy food for cheaper than junk food.
  • Posts: 4,855 Member
    I don't buy the idea reducing prices on "healthy foods" would increase consumption of these items. Look around at an all you can eat one price restaurant and notice the ratio of veggies and fruit compared to greasy entries, cheese bread, sugar/fat laden deserts, etc.
This discussion has been closed.