Farming productivity increases have reduced famine globally over the past 20 years, but obesity has emerged as a major public health issue. While governments ensure food safety, obesity is more complex as it involves changing behavior. Some argue governments should guide healthy choices, particularly for children, but others say individuals should decide. High health costs of obesity provide grounds for action, such as taxing unhealthy foods, but this risks infringing on personal freedom.
Farming productivity increases have reduced famine globally over the past 20 years, but obesity has emerged as a major public health issue. While governments ensure food safety, obesity is more complex as it involves changing behavior. Some argue governments should guide healthy choices, particularly for children, but others say individuals should decide. High health costs of obesity provide grounds for action, such as taxing unhealthy foods, but this risks infringing on personal freedom.
Farming productivity increases have reduced famine globally over the past 20 years, but obesity has emerged as a major public health issue. While governments ensure food safety, obesity is more complex as it involves changing behavior. Some argue governments should guide healthy choices, particularly for children, but others say individuals should decide. High health costs of obesity provide grounds for action, such as taxing unhealthy foods, but this risks infringing on personal freedom.
Farming productivity increases have reduced famine globally over the past 20 years, but obesity has emerged as a major public health issue. While governments ensure food safety, obesity is more complex as it involves changing behavior. Some argue governments should guide healthy choices, particularly for children, but others say individuals should decide. High health costs of obesity provide grounds for action, such as taxing unhealthy foods, but this risks infringing on personal freedom.
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The world's expanding waistline
When the world was a simpler place, the rich were fat, the poor were thin, and people worried about how to feed the hungry. Now, in much of the world, the rich are thin, the poor are fat, and people are worrying about obesity. Thanks to rising agricultural productivity, famine is rarer all over the globe. According to the UN, the number of people short of food fell from 920m in 1980 to 799m in 2000, even though the world's population increased by 1.6 billion over the period. But the consequence of this prosperity brings a new problem and with it a host of interesting policy dilemmas. Obesity is the world's biggest public-health issue today - the main cause of heart disease, which kills more people these days than AIDS, malaria, war; the principal risk factor in diabetes; heavily implicated in cancer and other diseases. Since the World Health Organisation labelled obesity an 'epidemic' in 2000, there have been many reports on its fearful consequences. Will public-health warnings, combined with media pressure, persuade people to get thinner, just as they finally put them off tobacco? There is now agreement among doctors that governments should do something to help. Diet by command? There's nothing new about the idea that governments should intervene in the food business. One of the earliest examples was in 1202, when King John of England first banned the adulteration of bread. Governments and people seem to agree that ensuring the safety and stability of the food supply is part of the state's job. But obesity is a more complicated issue than food safety. It is not about ensuring that people don't get poisoned; it is about changing their behaviour. Should governments be trying to do anything about it at all? There is a bad reason for doing something, and a couple of good ones. The bad reason is that governments should help citizens look after themselves. People, the argument goes, are misled by their bodies, which are constantly trying to store a few more calories in case of hunger in the near future. Governments should help guide them towards better eating habits. But that argument is weaker in the case of food than it is for tobacco - nicotine is addictive, chocolate is not - people have a choice of being sensible or silly. People should choose, not governments. Get them young A better argument for intervention is that dietary habits are established early in childhood. Once people get fat, it is hard for them to get thin; once they are used to breakfasting on chips and Coke, it's hard to change. The state, which has some responsibility for shaping young people, should try to ensure that its small citizens aren't overdosing on sugar at primary school. Britain's government is talking about tough restrictions on advertising junk food to children. It seems unlikely that it will have much effect. Sweden already bans advertising to children, and its young people are as fat as those in comparable countries. Other moves, such as banning junk food from schools, might work better. The cost of obesity A second plausible argument for intervention is that thin people subsidise fat people through health care. If everybody is forced to pay for the seriously fat, then everybody has an interest in seeing them slim down. This should not be a problem in insurance-financed health care systems, such as America's. Insurance companies should be able to charge fat people more because they cost more. That leaves the question of what should happen in a state-financed health system. Why not tax fattening food - sweets, snacks and takeaways? That might discourage consumption of unhealthy food and also get back some of the costs of obesity. It might; but it would also be too great an intrusion on liberty for the gain in equity and efficiency it might (or might not) represent. Society has a legitimate interest in fat because fat and thin people both pay for it. But it also has a legitimate interest in not having the government interfere in people's private business. If people want to eat their way to grossness and an early grave, let them. Questions 1-8 Do the following statements agree with the views of the writer in the passage? You should write YES if the statement agrees with the views of the writer NO if the statement contradicts the views of the writer NOT GIVEN if it impossible to say what the writer thinks about this 1. Increasing world population has led to famine. 2. Obesity is one of the biggest killers in the world. 3. Doctors should advise people on how to lose weight. 4. Governments should try to prevent children from picking up bad eating habits. 5. Overweight people cost health systems more, and therefore should pay health insurance. 6. Overweight people should not smoke. 7. Banning advertisements of junk food aimed at children would change their eating habits. 8. Everyone has a right to eat what they like and as much as they like. Questions 9-15 Complete the summary below. Choose NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS from the passage for each answer. Farming today is much more productive than even twenty years ago, and it is due to this increase in 9. ………. that famine in this time has become much less common in the world. However, it has led to a new problem of obesity, which has become the most significant global 10. ………. concern. It is generally agreed that the government should be responsible for protecting the 11. ………. of society's food. However, obesity is a more complicated issue and it raises the question of whether governments should try to alter people's 12. ………. .Many disagree that the duty of the government is to take care of society by encouraging 13. ………. . Surely, people have a choice whether to eat healthily or not. Those who favour government involvement in our food consumption think it is more effective to try to change people while they are still at 14. ………. There should therefore be restrictions on junk food being advertised to children. The problem, though, is that this has already been tried in Sweden, and there is no difference between there and 15. ………. . Questions 16-19 Complete the summary below using words from the box. At the moment, the extra cost of health care attributable to obese people is paid by 16. ………. In countries where health care is funded by insurance, this is not such a problem because overweight people can be charged higher premiums. However, in countries which have 17. ………. funded medical services this is not possible. One possible solution would be the introduction of a 18. ………. on unhealthy food. Although this might work to reduce obesity, it is likely to be very unpopular - most people will see it as too great an interference in personal 19. ………. . doctors government privacy finance health society ruling policy citizen freedom individuals company choice diet levy business