Mexico's Junk Food Tax is Approved

In Mexico, Congress has approved a new tax on junk food such as sugary drinks and high calorie foods. The tax will be one pesto (8 cents) per liter and 8% sales tax on foods such as potato chips, sweets and cereals. About 70% of Mexicans are overweight and 1/3 are obese. Despite these statistics the soft drink and food industries lobbied against the tax. This is starting to become a new trend such as the soda tax on soft drinks in New York City.
Would these taxes actually help the obese rate within Mexico?
Or would people still spend money on junk food even though it will cost more?
Do they even have access to fresh fruits and vegetables and are they more expensive than the newly taxed junk food?
So many questions come to mind about this approved tax. But the one thing that will always help is nutrition education. Having community focused programs will help people make healthier decisions instead of making them pay more.

I have attached the link to the article: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/01/world/americas/mexico-junk-food-tax-is-approved.html?ref=health&_r=1&

-TD

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