Alcohol, sugary beverages kill 10.6 million yearly — WHO

Alcohol, sugary beverages kill 10.6 million yearly — WHO

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The World Health Organisation has called for increased taxes on alcohol and Sugary-Sweetened Beverages to reduce deaths from drinking alcohol and unhealthy behaviours.

The WHO who made this known in a press statement on Tuesday, noted that globally, 2.6 million people die from drinking alcohol every year and over eight million from an unhealthy diet, implementing a tax on alcohol and SSBs will reduce these deaths.

Meanwhile, new data released by the WHO on Tuesday showed a low global rate of taxes being applied to unhealthy products such as alcohol and SSBs.

The findings highlighted that the majority of countries are not using taxes to incentivise healthier behaviours.

“Half of all countries taxing SSBs are also taxing water, which is not recommended by WHO. Although 108 countries are taxing some sort of sugar-sweetened beverage, globally, on the average excise tax, a tax designated for a specified consumer product, represents just 6.6 percent of the price of soda.

“At least 148 countries have applied excise taxes to alcoholic beverages at the national level. However, wine is exempted from excise taxes in at least 22 countries, most of which are in the European Region. Globally, on average, the excise tax share in the price of the most sold brand of beer is 17.2 percent. For the most sold brand of the most sold spirits type, it is 26.5 percent,” it said.

A 2017 study shows that taxes that increase alcohol prices by 50 percent would help avert over 21 million deaths over 50 years and generate nearly $17tn in additional revenues.

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