Experts urge Government to build healthier food industry as polling shows public distrust in companies

New polling for the Recipe for Change campaign reveals the British public does not trust food companies to make products healthier without government intervention.

Credit: David Madden | Recipe for ChangeCredit: David Madden | Recipe for Change

News Children's Food Campaign

Published: Friday 8 November 2024


Featured in the press

The Guardian

Tax unhealthy foods to tackle obesity, say campaigners

Friday 8 November 2024 Open article

The Grocer

We must tax more than soft drinks for a healthy nation

Thursday 7 November 2024 Open article

35 organisations have called on Chancellor Rachel Reeves and Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting to set out a more ambitious plan for a healthier food industry, and go further than they did in the Autumn Budget, as low public trust revealed in new YouGov poll.

Findings reveal:

  • Only 13% of the public believe food companies will make their food healthier without Government intervention 
  • 68% of British adults would support an industry levy being expanded to other sugary and salty food where the money raised supported children’s food and health initiatives
  • 35 leading expert health, food and children’s bodies along with royal medical colleges call on government to accelerate and expand financial incentives to promote a healthier food industry

In a collective call to action, leading food, health and children’s advocacy groups, along with experts and royal medical colleges including Sustain, the Food Foundation, the Obesity Health Alliance, British Heart Foundation, Bite Back, Diabetes UK and the Royal Society for Public Health have written to the Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves and Health and Social Care Secretary Wes Streeting to go ‘faster and further’ in accelerating financial incentives to create a healthier food industry.

The letter, sent as part of the "Recipe for Change" campaign, coincides with new polling data highlighting the British public’s scepticism towards food companies’ commitment to health. Conducted by YouGov with nearly 5,000 British adults, the survey reveals that:

  • 74% of adults believe that companies are not honest about the health impacts of their food, with only 17% of the public trusting them to be honest
  • 61% of people are worried about sugar and saturated fat levels in their food, 50% about salt levels, and 72% about high levels of processing
  • Only 13% believe food companies will reduce unhealthy ingredients in their food without government intervention
  • 68% support an expansion of the sugary drinks tax to other unhealthy foods, if the money supported children’s food and health initiatives

Read coverage of our findings in the Guardian

In the Autumn Budget, the government announced that it will commence uprating the Soft Drinks Industry Levy with inflation, it will review the current thresholds, and whether to end the exemption for pre-packaged milk-based drinks (or alternative plant-based drinks) containing added sugar.

Whilst these measures are welcome, the coalition’s letter underscores the need for decisive government action which must include developing plans for the wider regulation of the food industry as part of the Comprehensive Spending Review and budget processes in 2025. By advancing financial incentives and regulatory measures, the UK can foster a food industry that better supports public health.

The new polling is in line with the recommendations of the independent National Food Strategy led by Henry Dimbleby, which suggests that an industry-wide sugar and salt reformulation tax could have the potential to raise up to £3 billion per year that could be reinvested into programmes designed to increase access to healthy food. Modelling for the Recipe for Change campaign suggests that the reduction of salt and sugar it would trigger could prevent up to 2 million cases of diet-related ill health (including cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, respiratory disease and several types of cancer), and be worth up to £77.9 billion over 25 years. 

These recommendations were echoed again recently by a new report from the Lords’ Select Committee Inquiry on Food, Diet and Obesity Recipe for Health which exposed the shocking levels of ill health associated with a ‘broken food system’ dominated by ultra-processed products that are high in fat, salt and sugar, which cost billions in healthcare and lost productivity each year. The Lords’ report called on the government to address the lack of financial incentives that could align the food industry with delivering on its own health and economic growth mission.

Any new fiscal incentive for the food industry would build on the success of the Soft Drinks Industry Levy, which has succeeded in reducing overall sugar sold in soft drinks by 34% whilst raising over £1.8 billion since 2018, enabling the Government to invest in children’s health by expanding breakfast clubs, holiday activity and food programmes and primary sports and PE equipment.

 

Anna Taylor, Executive Director of the Food Foundation, a leading signatory to the letter, says:

“The damage the food industry is doing to children’s health is the biggest threat to our nation’s wellbeing and future productivity and this needs to be reined in – urgently. The government must now get bolder, creating real incentives to force the industry to align with public health goals, further and faster.”

John Maingay, Director of Policy and Influencing at the British Heart Foundation, says:

“The Soft Drinks Industry Levy has shown us that effective and enforced measures like this work to incentivise manufacturers to make their products healthier. The Government should now build on its success by extending a similar levy to foods containing too much salt and sugar. This will help to address stubbornly high rates of obesity, overweight, and cardiovascular disease across the UK.”

Kath Dalmeny, Chief Executive of Sustain: the alliance for better food and farming and a signatory to the letter says:

“It's time to stop subsidising obesity and start incentivising health. While we welcome the move to strengthen the Soft Drinks Industry Levy, shop shelves are still loaded with unhealthy food after decades of ineffective voluntary reduction programmes. Enough is enough. Let’s build on what works and enforce real regulation, with consistent financial incentives across the food industry. This will give children the healthier future they truly deserve."

Katharine Jenner, Director of the Obesity Health Alliance, and a signatory to the letter, says:

“These new poll results confirm that the public does not trust the food and drink industry to put health before profit. Years of manipulative tactics have allowed them to avoid regulation, delay progress and disguised products as 'healthy,' hiding the sad reality that they’re packed with salt, sugar, and saturated fat. We’re now calling on our new government to turn words into action and deliver real change”

Ansaf Azhar, the Association of Directors of Public Health spokesperson for healthy places, says:

“Directors of Public Health are already working with a wide range of organisations and individuals locally to create environments that make affordable, healthier food options more accessible.

“To be truly effective though, this local action needs to be backed by national legislation. The measures outlined in the King’s Speech and last week’s budget are very welcome, but we know that to achieve the Government’s mission to prevent obesity and food-related ill health, we need to implement a raft of other measures too.

“The good news is that we know what to do and how to do it, and we are here, ready and willing, to support the Government to make healthier eating an option for everyone, regardless of where they live, or how much money they have.”

Read the open letter here

Read our polling briefing here


Children's Food Campaign: Better food and food teaching for children in schools, and protection of children from junk food marketing are the aims of Sustain's high-profile Children's Food Campaign. We also want clear food labelling that can be understood by everyone, including children.

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