• Health economics · Sep 2011

    Does the EU sugar policy reform increase added sugar consumption? An empirical evidence on the soft drink market.

    • Céline Bonnet and Vincent Requillart.
    • Toulouse School of Economics (INRA, GREMAQ), Toulouse, France. cbonnet@toulouse.inra.fr
    • Health Econ. 2011 Sep 1; 20 (9): 1012-24.

    AbstractWhereas National Health authorities recommend a decrease in the consumption of 'added' sugar, a reform on the sugar market will lead to a 36% decrease of the sugar price in the EU. Using French data on soft drinks purchases, this paper investigates the anticipated impact of this reform on the consumption of sugar-sweetened beverages. The reform of the EU sugar policy leads to a decrease in regular soft drink prices by 3% and varies across brands. To assess substitution within this food category, we use a random-coefficients logit model that takes into account a large number of differentiated products and heterogeneity in consumers' behavior. Results suggest that price changes would lead to an increase in market shares of regular products by 7.5% and to substitutions between brands to the benefit of products with the highest sugar content. On the whole, it would raise consumption of regular soft drinks by more than 1 litre per person per year and consumption of added sugar by 124 g per person per year, this increase being larger in households composed of overweight and obese individuals.Copyright © 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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