US economy

Soda tax: Connecticut may be home to the first statewide soda tax in the U.S.


Soda taxes are bubbling up from the local to the state level.

Connecticut may become the first state in the country to tax sugar-sweetened beverages if Gov. Ned Lamont has his way. 

He’s proposed a 1.5-percent-per-ounce tax on sugary sodas, which he anticipates will generate $163.1 million for the Nutmeg State in fiscal year 2021, which begins the preceding July,  He says it will also help residents become healthier.

Several municipalities across the U.S. have put similar soda taxes in place, including Seattle, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Boulder, Colorado.

Such taxes are not necessarily shoe-ins. The one in Cook County, Illinois, which includes Chicago, was repealed in 2017. 

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“The governor believes that in addition to addressing our long-term fiscal stability, the budget should also help outline policy priorities for our state,” Lamont’s spokeswoman Maribel La Luz said in an e-mail, adding that proposals, like the soda tax, are meant to discourage unhealthy behaviors.

She said Connecticut currently meets or exceeds many national health targets, but can do more to tackle chronic conditions, such as heart disease and cancer, which have become a leading cause of death in the state and contribute to rising healthcare costs. Obesity affects 26.9 percent of the adults in Connecticut and more so among minority groups. 

What makes this first-ever statewide effort significant is it reduces the likelihood of consumers going to neighboring areas to avoid the tax — what experts call leakage. While it’d be easy to go from a taxed city to a nearby suburb, leaving a state is a hassle.

“With a larger geographic scope of the policy, you have less opportunity for people to cross the border to do their beverage shopping,” said Shu Wen Ng, a health economist at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. “For both health implications and revenue generating, a state level or larger geographical scope would be more meaningful.”

More than three dozen countries and territories around the globe have instituted sugar-sweetened beverage taxes, she added. Among them are Mexico, France, Norway, Estonia, Saudi Arabia, Bermuda, Thailand, South Africa, Fiji and the Philippines.

 

“Beverage taxes prompt consumers to shop across the border and when they do, they’ll take care of their entire grocery list out of state, costing local grocery stores their sales, and employees their jobs,” said William Dermody Jr., spokesman for the American Beverage Association, which represents non-alcoholic beverage companies.

He called the taxes “unproductive” and said manufacturers can help consumers reduce the amount of sugar they get from beverages by creating more drinks with less or no sugar and making smaller-sized bottles and cans.

The University of California Berkeley last week released a study on the effectiveness of soda taxes. Berkeley was the first municipality in the U.S. to put one in place.

Researchers found that between 2015, when the tax took effect, and 2018, residents in Berkeley’s diverse and low-income neighborhoods reported drinking 52 percent fewer servings of sugary beverages than they did before the tax passed in November 2014. In addition, water consumption jumped 29 percent during those three years.

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Kristine Madsen, faculty director of the Berkeley Food Institute at UC Berkeley’s School of Public Health, said the residents’ changed behavior could be due to not only the tax, but also the message the tax sends to city residents.

“There are some earlier studies out of Berkeley that suggest that the messaging alone is effective at reducing consumption,” she said. “But people are still very much affected by what hits their pocketbooks.”

Soda has been linked to obesity, a significant problem in the U.S.

Close to 40 percent of adults and 18.5 percent of youngsters are obese, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Last week, California Assemblyman Richard Bloom, D-Santa Monica, proposed a soda tax for the third year in a row, but the previous two years, it died in committee. 

In June, California passed a law, prohibiting municipalities from passing local soda taxes.

Follow USA TODAY reporter Zlati Meyer on Twitter: @ZlatiMeyer



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