UPDATE 1-Germany to impose levy on sugary drinks in bid to reduce obesity rates

Germany plans to impose a levy on sugary drinks ‌from 2028, under a healthcare reform package approved on Wednesday, as it aims to rein in rising rates of obesity to ease pressure on the health system. The expected annual revenue of ‌450 million euros ($527 million) from the surcharge will fund disease prevention and health promotion schemes.

UPDATE 1-Germany to impose levy on sugary drinks in bid to reduce obesity rates

Germany plans to impose a levy on sugary drinks ‌from 2028, under a healthcare reform package approved on Wednesday, as it aims to rein in rising rates of obesity to ease pressure on the health system.

The expected annual revenue of ‌450 million euros ($527 million) from the surcharge will fund disease prevention and health promotion schemes. Details ‌of the levy, including the rate, are still under discussion.

The German sugar industry lobby on Wednesday condemned the plan, saying more expensive sugar had not reduced the proportion of overweight people in any country. The move is in ⁠line ​with recommendations by the ⁠World Health Organization, which has urged countries to raise prices of sugary drinks, alcohol and tobacco by 50% over ⁠the next 10 years through taxation.

A Forsa survey published in February showed around 60% of Germans support ​a levy on sugary soft drinks. PREVENTION OF DISEASES

Britain introduced a similar sugar tax ⁠ten years ago and last year extended it to pre-packaged milk-based drinks. The WHO says that over 100 countries ⁠tax ​sugary drinks.

Studies in Britain and Mexico have shown such measures can cut sugar intake and help prevent diseases like diabetes. The German government proposal, which requires widely expected confirmation by ⁠parliament, follows mounting public and cross-party support for stricter measures against excessive sugar consumption.

Daniel Guenther, state ⁠premier of Schleswig-Holstein who initiated ⁠the proposal, told Reuters in March that "too much sugar makes people ill," and strained healthcare and the economy. ($1 = 0.8548 euros)

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