Like tobacco, carbon emissions and sugar, we can expect the harm to human health and the environment caused by the production and consumption of meat to be mitigated by 'sin taxes'in the next five to ten years.
"Sin taxes" on meat to reduce its huge impact on climate change and human health look inevitable, according to analysts for investors managing more than $4tn of assets.
The global livestock industry causes 15% of all global greenhouse gas emissions and meat consumption is rising around the world, but dangerous climate change cannot be avoided unless this is radically curbed. Furthermore, many people already eat far too much meat, seriously damaging their health and incurring huge costs. Livestock also drive other problems, such as water pollution and antibiotic resistance.
A new analysis from the investor network Farm Animal Investment Risk and Return (Fairr) Initiative argues that meat is therefore now following the same path as tobacco, carbon emissions and sugar towards a sin tax, a levy on harmful products to cut consumption. Meat taxes have already been discussed in parliaments in Germany, Denmark and Sweden, the analysis points out, and China's government has cut its recommended maximum meat consumption by 45% in 2016.
Would you pay a "meat tax" or would you change your eating habits?
(Score: 4, Interesting) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 11 2017, @10:23PM (2 children)
what's new with that?
Yes some populations adapted to survive the deprivation [cornell.edu] but europeans did [couriermail.com.au] not [blogspot.com].
(Score: 0, Flamebait) by VLM on Monday December 11 2017, @10:50PM (1 child)
Those countries are already trying to ethnically cleanse the whites and replace then with arabs, so white people not being able to survive the diet in those screwed up countries is not going to be seen as a problem, if you know what I mean. That data will probably be used to support the plan, not oppose it.
(Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday December 11 2017, @11:00PM
Crazy is as VLM does.