ADVERTISEMENT
Low taxes making sugary drinks, alcohol more affordable: WHOAccording to a report from WHO, sugary drinks have become more affordable in 62 countries in 2024 compared with 2022.
Reuters
Last Updated IST
<div class="paragraphs"><p>The WHO has ‌called for higher taxes on alcohol and sugar-sweetened ⁠drinks multiple times in ‌recent years</p></div>

The WHO has ‌called for higher taxes on alcohol and sugar-sweetened ⁠drinks multiple times in ‌recent years

Credit: iStock Photo

Sugary drinks and ​alcohol are not being sufficiently taxed and remain affordable, making it harder to tackle the chronic health problems caused by these beverages, according to ​two reports from the World Health Organisation.

ADVERTISEMENT

The WHO has ‌called for higher taxes on alcohol and sugar-sweetened ⁠drinks multiple times in ‌recent years, arguing it would help cut consumption of the products which contribute to diseases such as diabetes, as well as raise money at a time when development aid is shrinking and public debt ​is rising.

According to a report from WHO, sugary drinks have become more affordable in 62 countries in 2024 compared with 2022. In a separate report, the health ‌agency said ‌beer has become more affordable in 56 countries during the same period.

"Health taxes are not a ⁠silver bullet, and they're not simple. They can be politically unpopular and they attract opposition from powerful industries with deep pockets and a lot to lose, but ⁠many countries have shown that when they're ⁠done right, they're a powerful tool for health," said ‌WHO Director-General Tedros Ghebreyesus.

Last year, the health agency ‌launched the "3 by 35" initiative to push countries to raise the prices of sugary drinks, alcohol and tobacco by 50% over the next ‍10 years through taxation.

WHO expects the tax initiative to raise $1 trillion by 2035, based on evidence from health taxes in countries such as Colombia and South Africa.

Soda makers such as Coca-Cola and PepsiCo, and Mondelez, which manufactures Oreo cookies, have faced scrutiny from US Health Secretary Robert F Kennedy Jr, who has pushed the "Make America Healthy Again" agenda, recommending that consumers ​avoid highly processed foods ‌and eat more protein and less sugar to achieve a healthy diet.

ADVERTISEMENT
(Published 13 January 2026, 21:37 IST)