Tax on sugary drinks could raise €122m, officials say

In pre-budget document Minister for Finance’s office estimates total from 10 cent a can

Minister for Health Leo Varadkar said a 20 per cent tax on sugar-sweetened drinks would lead to about 10,000 fewer obese adults. Photograph: Thinkstock
Minister for Health Leo Varadkar said a 20 per cent tax on sugar-sweetened drinks would lead to about 10,000 fewer obese adults. Photograph: Thinkstock

The introduction of a tax on sugar-sweetened drinks remains under consideration despite not being included in the last two budgets, the Department of Finance has said.

Officials in Minister for Finance Michael Noonan's office estimated a 10 cent tax on a can would raise €122 million a year, according to pre-budget documents seen by The Irish Times. They said the Revenue Commissioners warned of cross-Border smuggling if a similar measure was not enacted in Northern Ireland.

However, the assessment of the proposed tax by officials prior to the last budget is less critical than the document prepared a year earlier. Before Budget 2015, officials warned the measure could act as a disincentive to soft drink multinationals in Ireland. It would also impact on retailers and domestic soft drinks producers and would fail to distinguish between sugar-sweetened and artificially-sweetened drinks, they told Mr Noonan.

A year later, they raised no specific issues of concern and pointed out that France raised €373 million in 2014 from a similar measure.

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Obesity

Minister for Health

Leo Varadkar

wrote to Mr Noonan last September calling for the introduction of a 20 per cent tax on sugar-sweetened beverages as a way of tackling obesity. He said the measure would result in a 1.25 per cent reduction in obesity, or about 10,000 fewer obese adults.

France, Hungary and Finland have introduced taxes on the volume of sugar-sweetened drinks produced, and Belgium is to follow suit next year. More than 50 per cent of Irish adults are overweight and 25 per cent are obese.

Paul Cullen

Paul Cullen

Paul Cullen is a former heath editor of The Irish Times.