By Guy Bentley at FEE. He is a reporter for the Daily Caller.
"Forcing restaurants, movie theaters, and grocery stores to put
calorie counts and nutritional information on menus has no long-term
impact on obesity.
So says a new study from the Cato Institute, which draws on nearly
300,000 respondents to the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System
(BRFSS) who hail from 30 large cities between 2003 and 2012.
So-called “menu mandates” stirred controversy when they were introduced by New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg back in 2009.
Supporters of the law said the mandate would nudge consumers to eat
less and would cut obesity, while skeptics said the law would put a cost
on business, be ineffective and was part of an ever-growing nanny
state.
Menu mandates were eventually made a provision in the Obamacare
legislation, but their implementation has been delayed until 2017. The
menu mandates set out in Obamacare are projected to affect 300,000
establishments. After almost a decade of these mandates, Cato argues
there is now sufficient data to examine the effects.
“We find that the impact of such labeling requirements on BMI,
obesity, and other health-related outcomes are trivial, and, to the
extent it exists, it fades out rapidly,” says Dr. Aaron Yelowitz, an adjunct scholar at the Cato Institute and author of the study.
“For virtually all groups explored, the long-run impact on body
weight is essentially zero. Analysis of subgroups suggests that to the
extent that menu mandates affect short-run outcomes, they do so through a
‘novelty effect’ that wears off quickly. Subgroups that were thought
likely to experience the largest gains in knowledge from such mandates
exhibit no short-run or long-run changes in weight.”
Customer priorities are mostly focused on convenience, price, and
taste, with calorie labels playing almost no part in their decision,
apart from when they are initially introduced, according to Cato.
“There is a statistically significant reduction in obesity at time of
implementation— roughly 1.25 percentage points—which would bring down
the obesity rate to 24.5 percent. However, the effects are short-lived.
In the year after enactment, the novelty of menu mandates appears to
wear off, and obesity rates again rise, such that the entire impact on
obesity disappears within four years.”
After NYC’s calorie count menus were shown to have no effect on
obesity rates, one of the menu’s most vocal supporters and former Obama
regulatory czar, Cass Sunstein, suggested
an even simpler version of the scheme should be rolled out, putting red
lights in high-calorie foods and green lights on healthier ones.
Yelowitz argues doubling down on this approach will do little to
tackle America’s expanding waistline as consumers are not suffering from
a lack of nutritional or calorie information.
“The current analysis shows that the problem is not lack of knowledge
or conveying information—on the contrary, the consumers who responded
to the menu mandates were among the most knowledgeable. Rather, people
have preferences that are more or less fixed, and for the most part,
people enjoy cheeseburgers more than broccoli.”"
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