Oral Presentation Australian & New Zealand Obesity Society 2016 Annual Scientific Meeting

Healthy Diets ASAP (Australian Standardized Affordability and Pricing) methods and results: Are healthy diets really more expensive and how would price be affected by changes to the GST? (#46)

Amanda Lee 1 , Sarah Kane 1 , Meron Lewis
  1. Queensland University of Technology, Kelvin Grove, QLD, Australia

Introduction Fiscal policies may help improve population diets but standardised food pricing methods to inform decisions are lacking. We aimed to develop and validate methods following approaches proposed by the International Network for Food and Obesity/Non-communicable Diseases Research, Monitoring and Action Support (INFORMAS)1; use resultant methods to assess price, relative price and affordability of current and healthy (recommended) diets; and assess impacts of potential changes to taxation policy in Australia.

Methods ‘Current diets’ were constructed using data from the recent Australian Health Survey and ‘healthy diets’ from Australian Dietary Guidelines models, for households of two adults and two children. Food prices were collected in all stores in randomly selected areas of SEIFA quintiles in two capital cities. Diet cost under potential policy scenarios was compared with household incomes. Methods were endorsed at a National Forum.

Results Households spent the majority (58%) of their current food budget on unhealthy, energy-dense choices, including take-away foods (14%) and sugar sweetened beverages (4%) as confirmed by Australian Bureau of Statistics analysis of household consumption data. Healthy diets cost 15% less than current diets and 31% of the disposable income of low socioeconomic households. These would become unaffordable under proposed changes to expand 10% goods and services tax (GST) to include basic healthy foods. However, retaining exemptions and increasing GST rate may help improve food security.

Conclusions This project shows that standardized diet pricing methods can be developed, validated and agreed nationally. Results suggest that healthy diets can be more affordable than current diets, but other factors may be as important as price in determining food choice. Expanding the base of the GST is not a good idea for food security or health.

  1. 1. Lee A, Ni Mhurchu C, Sacks G, Hawkes C, et al (2013), Monitoring the price and affordability of foods and diets globally, Obesity Reviews, 2013; 14 (Suppl 1) 82-95.
  2. 2. Lee AJ, Kane S, Ramsey R, Good E, Dick M Testing the price and affordability of healthy and current (unhealthy) diets and the potential impacts of policy change in Australia, BMC Public Health 2016, 16:315 doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-2996-y