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Latin America leads the fight against junk food with the US on the sidelines

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While countries such as Chile and Mexico enact experimental policies to curb obesity, the US remains yoked to sugars and fats

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A street vendor selling Coke in Mexico City. Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images


Poverty and hunger will sadly always be with us. But in today's age of abundant calories, the poor may also be obese – something governments in Latin America are waking up to.

These countries are fighting junk food directly with a slew of initiatives that are making the region an incubator for ideas that could be adopted elsewhere, including in the US.

Chile, worried about expanding waistlines, has a new labeling system that comes into effect this year. The legislation forces food makers to emblazon packages with warning labels if their food is high in sugar, salt, calories or fat. There will also be a ban on advertising unhealthy products to children.

"This is absolutely astounding," Marion Nestle, the influential food blogger and professor of food policy at New York University told the Christian Science Monitor. "I've never seen anything like this before."

Jason Block, an assistant professor at the Harvard Medical School's obesity prevention program in Boston, believes Chile's moves show promise, especially as the country is using a comprehensive approach in fighting obesity.

"This is important and has more chance of success than simply doing one thing," he said by email. "Also, Chilean leaders seem willing to try a muted version of their proposal first and then build upon it after an initial trial period."

The initiatives sweeping Latin America are making the region the world's laboratory for government policy aimed at steering consumers away from processed food.

In a bold move last year, Mexico approved a tax of one peso (about eight cents) on each liter of sugary drinks sold as it tries to battle the country's obesity crisis.

Other countries in Latin America have imposed taxes and banned McDonald's from using toys to promote meals for children. Peru, Uruguay and Costa Rica have cut junk food from public schools since 2012, while Ecuador has imposed food labeling using a traffic light system.

Companies, for their part, feel they are being singled out. Arcos Dorados, the largest operator of McDonald's restaurants in Latin America and the Caribbean, has criticized moves by government to target its restaurants but has also made changes to its menus.

"We changed our Happy Meals, cutting calories, sugar and salt, by bringing in fresh fruit, the option of cherry tomatoes, smaller French fry portions, and offering drinks of bottled water or milk," said Sonia Ruseler, senior director, corporate communications at Arcos Dorados.


Will the food fight spread?

Outside of Latin America, however, fighting unhealthy foods with government decree has proved difficult. Denmark backed off on its sugar tax because the government found its citizens were crossing the border to avoid fat taxes.

In New York, the courts struck down former mayor Michael Bloomberg's ban on super-size sugary drinks last year. The city's new mayor, Bill de Blasio, said he plans to pursue the issue but he will be up against the same deep pockets and creative campaigns of the food industry.

While major food processors rail again restrictions on their business, major studies show an overabundance of sugar in food is at the root of many health issues. One study spearheaded by the University of California in San Francisco concluded that a 10% reduction in US sugar consumption would avert 240,000 diabetes cases annually, as well as prevent heart attacks and other health-related deaths.

The US food industry has been successful in stopping a number of initiatives to label genetically modified foods and so it would be expected that other restrictions on their products would be fought with similar ferocity.

Not all food makers, however, object to governmental labeling initiatives. Organic food packagers are enjoying strong sales, owing a lot to the fact they are not part of the industrial food complex.

"We are very concerned about worldwide increases in serious health issues, such as diabetes and obesity, and we are supportive of comprehensive efforts to help solve these problems," said Andy Berliner, CEO and co-founder of Amy's Kitchen, which markets itself as the country's "leading natural frozen food brand".

He said the company supports food labeling for better choices, the labeling of GMOs and other nutritional information. " Accurate labeling and nutrition education benefits the organic food industry, the global food industry as a whole, and ultimately everyone who eats!"

There are a number of state and city-level initiatives but health critics believe countries such as the US need a national food and health policy, akin to efforts in Latin America. They warn the newly passed farm bill continues to subsidize large corporate food makers while other voices, such as first lady Michelle Obama, work piecemeal to promote healthy food choices.

"It doesn't make sense to tell people to eat vegetables and then produce junk; that leads only to bad health in the face of evident abundance," Mark Bittman, food columnist for the New York Times, argued in a recent column.

The US is clearly a long way from implementing national food policy that counters the impulses of junk food, but it will have a ringside view of how such policies could work as countries to the south implement far reaching reform.

Latin America leads the fight against junk food with the US on the sidelines | Guardian Sustainable Business | theguardian.com
 
Healthy food is not cheap in the big cities in the US,poor people have little choice.
 
Healthy food is not cheap in the big cities in the US,poor people have little choice.
Yea I am aware that junk food is cheapest no matter where you go...Even in UK junk food is soo damn cheap!

I am into nutrition so I read up such articles thought I would share!
 
Yea I am aware that junk food is cheapest no matter where you go...Even in UK junk food is soo damn cheap!

I am into nutrition so I read up such articles thought I would share!
Even for people who eat healthy,junkfood tastes so good sometimes.
 
Even for people who eat healthy,junkfood tastes so good sometimes.
Well, that is true....but sadly here in Europe healthy food isnt all that cheap....esp in a restaurant or something if it is like a salad bowl or something....

I rather eat from a fast food then sit and wait in a restaurant for a salad bowl which would cost me more time and $
 
Well, that is true....but sadly here in Europe healthy food isnt all that cheap....esp in a restaurant or something if it is like a salad bowl or something....

I rather eat from a fast food then sit and wait in a restaurant for a salad bowl which would cost me more time and $
I live in a city of 120k population,my luck is that this is a fruit and vegetable cultivation area.
All fresh and cheap,and yes fastfood is easy.
 
Snack Bar Sales Soar on Hunger for Productivity, Convenience - NBC News

Snack Bar Sales Soar on Hunger for Productivity, Convenience
BY MARTHA C. WHITE


American workers are more productive than ever, increasingly fueled by snack bars they can gulp on the go.

Sales have skyrocketed, and experts say it's a combination of our penchant for multi-tasking, the rise in "grazing" instead of eating full meals, a desire for convenience and a perception that bars are a healthy substitute for candy or other snack food.

“Bars fit into that hectic lifestyle consumers are facing these days,” said Darren Seifer, food and beverage industry analyst at the NPD Group. “When they’re typing at their desk or commuting to work and they have only one free hand, it certainly helps out with their rushed and hurried lifestyles.”

Snack bars are “becoming more and more important because people are snacking more .... I think the definition of meals has changed,” said Phil Lempert, CEO of the website SupermarketGuru.com. “If I look at the average single professional, they could be having a bar for breakfast in the morning,” he said, followed by more bars for morning or afternoon snacks.

Melanie Wrzesinski is a typical example. “I have two a day, usually,” the 30-year-old Greenville, S.C., resident said. Wrzesinski eats five small meals a day and finds bars easier to fit into her busy schedule working with brain-injury patients at a hospital, she said. “I keep some in my desk drawer at work so I don’t have to bring them every day.”

She has plenty of company. In a typical two-week period, almost a quarter of Americans eat some type of snack bar at home or bring one from home to eat later, according to NPD, a figure that’s jumped almost 10 percentage points in a decade.

Americans are also grabbing snack bars when they’re already on the go. Year-over-year, NPD found that the unit and dollar volume of snack bar sales to foodservice establishments — cafeterias, hotels, restaurants and the like — have grown by 13 percent and 15 percent, respectively.

Busy American worker bees are sacrificing breakfast, lunch and coffee breaks on the altar of productivity, and increasingly rely on snack bars to power them through their days.

According to data released earlier this month by the Bureau of Labor Statistics, worker productivity grew in the fourth quarter of 2013 at an annualized rate of 3.2 percent, propelled by a 4.9 percent increase in worker output and a 1.7 percent increase in hours worked.

In a 2012 online poll, ManpowerGroup division Right Management found that less than 20 percent of workers say they regularly take lunch breaks. About 40 percent of workers said they eat at their desks, and 28 percent say they infrequently or never take lunch breaks.

“We started to see this kind of behavior, in particular, when we had the recession, and people never really got out of it,” said Margaret-Ann Cole, senior vice president with Right Management. “It’s an example of the relentless stress workers are experiencing. It becomes the new normal.”

Snack bars are a convenient solution for some. “You just unwrap them and they’re ready to go,” Wrzesinski said. “You also don’t need to carve out half an hour to eat it.”

With that kind of workplace dynamic, it’s no wonder the popularity of bars has soared, said Beth Bloom, food analyst at Mintel. “Busy, on-the-go lifestyles definitely support growth in the category,” she said via email. “These items are easy to grab and go.”

And while Americans are working harder than ever, they expect their food to do the same. “Consumers gravitate to foods that have a health halo and could provide you with a benefit just by eating it,” the NPD Group’s Seifer said. “Why they’re choosing to have bars … has a lot to do with health.”

Seifer said people are looking for quick, convenient food that’s low in calories or high in fiber or protein. About half of Americans say they’re trying to add more protein to their diet, and manufacturers are responding. Last year, 18 percent of bars carried a “high protein" claim, up from slightly less than 13 percent in 2009, Bloom said.

“What we’re seeing with a lot of these bars is it’s either for protein or energy,” Lempert said. “It’s a handy way to get both nutrition and satisfaction.” Now that we’re using bars as a stopgap for meals or meal replacements, “We’re looking for more than just taste and sugar,” he said.

First published February 18th 2014, 7:43 am
 
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