International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand

© 2019 The Authors United Nations (UN) member states have, since 2011, worked to address the emerging global NCD crisis, but progress has, so far, been insufficient. Food trade policy is recognised to have the potential to impact certain major diet-related health and environmental outcomes. We study...

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Main Authors: Henning Tarp Jensen, Marcus R. Keogh-Brown, Bhavani Shankar, Wichai Aekplakorn, Sanjay Basu, Soledad Cuevas, Alan D. Dangour, Shabbir H. Gheewala, Rosemary Green, Edward Joy, Nipa Rojroongwasinkul, Nalitra Thaiprasert, Richard D. Smith
Format: Journal
Published: 2020
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/67939
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-679392020-04-02T15:20:00Z International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand Henning Tarp Jensen Marcus R. Keogh-Brown Bhavani Shankar Wichai Aekplakorn Sanjay Basu Soledad Cuevas Alan D. Dangour Shabbir H. Gheewala Rosemary Green Edward Joy Nipa Rojroongwasinkul Nalitra Thaiprasert Richard D. Smith Medicine Social Sciences © 2019 The Authors United Nations (UN) member states have, since 2011, worked to address the emerging global NCD crisis, but progress has, so far, been insufficient. Food trade policy is recognised to have the potential to impact certain major diet-related health and environmental outcomes. We study the potential for using import tariff protection as a health and environmental policy instrument. Specifically, we apply a rigorous and consistent Macroeconomic-Environmental-Demographic-health (MED-health) simulation model framework to study fiscal food policy import tariffs and dietary change in Thailand over the future 20 year period 2016-2035. We find that the existing Thai tariff structure, by lowering imports, lowers agricultural Land Use Change (LUC)-related GHG emissions and protects against cholesterol-related cardiovascular disease (CVD). This confirms previous evidence that food trade, measured by import shares of food expenditures and caloric intakes, is correlated with unhealthy eating and adverse health outcomes among importing country populations. A continued drive towards tariff liberalization and economic efficiency in Thailand may therefore come at the expense of reduced health and environmental sustainability of food consumption and production systems. Due to large efficiency losses, the existing tariff structure is, however, not cost-effective as an environmental or health policy instrument. However, additional simulations confirm that stylized 30% food sector import tariffs generally improve nutritional, clinical health, demographic, and environmental indicators across the board. We also find that diet-related health improvements can go hand-in-hand with increased Saturated Fatty Acid (SFA) intakes. Despite limited cost-effectiveness, policy makers from Thailand and abroad, including WHO, would therefore be well advised to consider targeted fiscal food policy tariffs as a potential intervention to maintain combined health and environmental sustainability, and to reconsider the specification of WHO dietary guidelines with their focus on SFA intake (rather than composition of fatty acid intake) targets. 2020-04-02T15:12:02Z 2020-04-02T15:12:02Z 2019-12-01 Journal 23528273 2-s2.0-85072652137 10.1016/j.ssmph.2019.100435 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85072652137&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/67939
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine
Social Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine
Social Sciences
Henning Tarp Jensen
Marcus R. Keogh-Brown
Bhavani Shankar
Wichai Aekplakorn
Sanjay Basu
Soledad Cuevas
Alan D. Dangour
Shabbir H. Gheewala
Rosemary Green
Edward Joy
Nipa Rojroongwasinkul
Nalitra Thaiprasert
Richard D. Smith
International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand
description © 2019 The Authors United Nations (UN) member states have, since 2011, worked to address the emerging global NCD crisis, but progress has, so far, been insufficient. Food trade policy is recognised to have the potential to impact certain major diet-related health and environmental outcomes. We study the potential for using import tariff protection as a health and environmental policy instrument. Specifically, we apply a rigorous and consistent Macroeconomic-Environmental-Demographic-health (MED-health) simulation model framework to study fiscal food policy import tariffs and dietary change in Thailand over the future 20 year period 2016-2035. We find that the existing Thai tariff structure, by lowering imports, lowers agricultural Land Use Change (LUC)-related GHG emissions and protects against cholesterol-related cardiovascular disease (CVD). This confirms previous evidence that food trade, measured by import shares of food expenditures and caloric intakes, is correlated with unhealthy eating and adverse health outcomes among importing country populations. A continued drive towards tariff liberalization and economic efficiency in Thailand may therefore come at the expense of reduced health and environmental sustainability of food consumption and production systems. Due to large efficiency losses, the existing tariff structure is, however, not cost-effective as an environmental or health policy instrument. However, additional simulations confirm that stylized 30% food sector import tariffs generally improve nutritional, clinical health, demographic, and environmental indicators across the board. We also find that diet-related health improvements can go hand-in-hand with increased Saturated Fatty Acid (SFA) intakes. Despite limited cost-effectiveness, policy makers from Thailand and abroad, including WHO, would therefore be well advised to consider targeted fiscal food policy tariffs as a potential intervention to maintain combined health and environmental sustainability, and to reconsider the specification of WHO dietary guidelines with their focus on SFA intake (rather than composition of fatty acid intake) targets.
format Journal
author Henning Tarp Jensen
Marcus R. Keogh-Brown
Bhavani Shankar
Wichai Aekplakorn
Sanjay Basu
Soledad Cuevas
Alan D. Dangour
Shabbir H. Gheewala
Rosemary Green
Edward Joy
Nipa Rojroongwasinkul
Nalitra Thaiprasert
Richard D. Smith
author_facet Henning Tarp Jensen
Marcus R. Keogh-Brown
Bhavani Shankar
Wichai Aekplakorn
Sanjay Basu
Soledad Cuevas
Alan D. Dangour
Shabbir H. Gheewala
Rosemary Green
Edward Joy
Nipa Rojroongwasinkul
Nalitra Thaiprasert
Richard D. Smith
author_sort Henning Tarp Jensen
title International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand
title_short International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand
title_full International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand
title_fullStr International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand
title_full_unstemmed International trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: Import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for Thailand
title_sort international trade, dietary change, and cardiovascular disease health outcomes: import tariff reform using an integrated macroeconomic, environmental and health modelling framework for thailand
publishDate 2020
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85072652137&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/67939
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