01 Dec Health alarms as corporate giants target developing countries
As affluent western markets reach saturation point, global food and drink firms have been opening up new frontiers among people living on $2 a day in low- and middle-income countries. The world’s poor have become their vehicle for growth. But diabetes, obesity and heart disease rates are soaring in developing countries, as multinationals find new ways of selling processed food to the poor… [South Africa is the focus of this excellent article in The Guardian]
Nestlé is using a floating supermarket to take its products to remote communities in the Amazon. Unilever has a small army of door-to-door vendors selling to low-income villages in India and west and east Africa. SABMiller has developed cheap beers in some African countries as part of a “price ladder” to its premium lager brands, and, as a leading Coca-Cola bottler and distributor, is aiming to double fizzy drinks sales in South African townships.
The companies say they are finding innovative ways to give isolated people the kind of choices the rich have enjoyed for years and are providing valuable jobs and incomes to some of the most marginalised. But health campaigners are raising the alarm. They fear the arrival of highly processed food and drink is also a vector for the lifestyle diseases, such as obesity, diabetes, heart disease and alcoholism, which are increasing at unprecedented rates in developing countries.
The South African minister of health, Aaron Motsoaledi, gives a grim interpretation of what that means for his country when he spoke to The Guardian earlier this month: “Health budgets will break because of the cost of amputations, artificial limbs, wheelchairs and cardiac surgery.”
A UN summit in New York in September confirmed the scale of the health crisis. Nearly two-thirds of all deaths worldwide in 2008 were attributable to lifestyle diseases. By 2030 these non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are expected to be the cause of nearly five times as many deaths as the traditional, infectious scourges of poor nations such as TB, malaria and Aids.
Last year 39% of acquisition deals by consumer goods companies were in emerging markets, compared with just 1% in 2008, according to the Grocer’s OC&C Global 50 league table.
As diets and lifestyles in developing countries change, their patterns of disease are following those seen in industrialised countries in the north equally rapidly. But for poor countries there is a double whammy: they have started suffering from high rates of NCDs before they have managed to deal with hunger and malnutrition.The double burden is devastating both their economic growth and their health budgets.
In South Africa, about a quarter of schoolchildren are now obese or overweight, as are 60% of women and 31% of men. Diabetes rates are soaring. Yet, nearly 20% of children aged one to nine have stunted growth, having suffered the kind of long-term malnutrition that leaves irreversible damage.
Moreover, obesity and malnutrition often occur in the same household, according to Leonie Joubert, a researcher at the University of Cape Town’s centre of criminology, and author of a forthcoming book on food security. “It’s not a case of having massive starvation on one end of the spectrum, and gluttony on the other. We have this kind of ‘hidden hunger’, almost pervasive in poorer communities where it’s easy to fill the hole in one’s belly with low-nutrient, cheap, empty-calorie foods to satisfy one’s hunger now, but not meet the body’s long-term nutritional needs.”
Dr Motsoaledi is a medically trained former anti-apartheid activist, and does not shy away from the dramatic. He marked the day the 7-billionth child was thought to have been born in to the global population by scrubbing up and delivering a baby himself by caesarean section. He then tied the new mother’s tubes as his contribution to family planning.
Taking radical action
Pushing through radical action on NCDs is of his priorities. He said: “When I was a medical student under apartheid, heart attacks were a rare thing for black people. “The main illnesses then were TB, malaria and kwashiorkor [malnutrition from protein deficiency]. That’s no longer true. Africans are eating more and more junk processed foods instead of their traditional diet. My mother hardly went to the shop. Anything you wanted to eat you grew and took straight from the soil. We had free range chickens, vegetables. I used to walk a long distance to school. My children hardly walk a metre from the car. Children are put in front of the TV and they eat junk in front of it. It is not a life of activity. It’s a globalised world; we can’t expect to be left untouched.”
He wantsto curb the marketing of tobacco and alcohol and regulate junk food, starting with reducing salt in bread and eliminating transfats, but he anticipates a fight. “There’s going to be war over this next year.” .
“It is like climate change. Are we going to do something about it when we are looking down the barrel of a gun and it is at its worst, when budgets have become unmanageable because of the sheer weight of disease? If those of us in power don’t do something now, that is what will happen. Anybody who dilly dallies on non-communicable diseases will be forced to act when the situation is out of control.”
The main obstacle to action was profit. “Industry is resisting very strongly, of course. The only reason people are not doing enough is the bottom dollar.”
Governments trying to restrict the marketing activity have found themselves challenged in court. Motsoaledi is watching the case brought by the tobacco industry against the Australian government, which wants to ban all branding on cigarette packs. “I want a similar structure for alcohol control,” he says.
He knows that he is likely to be the target of determined lobbying as well as legal action.
Unlike the UK secretary of state for health, who has invited food and alcohol companies to join his “responsibility deals” on public health, Motsoaledi sees no place for industry in helping draw up policy.
“You cannot make policy with them, they will just shape it for their profits. You can’t sit in the same room with a national brewer and come up with a policy on alcohol to benefit the nation.”
The interests Motsoaledi is taking on are indeed powerful and quick to defend themselves. SABMiller, the largest brewer in South Africa, points out in documents on its “alcohol responsibility” web pages that it supports 3% of the total employment in South Africa, and generates taxes – mostly from excise duty on its products – that account for 5% of the government’s tax revenue. It believes industry can play a role in tackling health problems and argues that its marketing promotes brand loyalty, not greater drinking.
Kristin Wolfe, head of alcohol policy at SABMiller, said: “We market to our target consumer; we don’t go after non-drinkers. What the UN wanted in New York was a whole societal approach. Marketing is seen as just one factor. It has to be responsible, but there’s a distinction between harmful drinking and marketing. It’s a more enlightened approach to get industry to do what it can; we will make better progress,.” The company points to its investment in projects to tackle alcohol harm and bring unlicensed outlets within regulation.
Thandi Puoane, a professor at University of Western Cape, has tracked the increase in NCDs since the end of apartheid. With sanctions lifted and freedom of movement introduced after the multiracial elections in 1994, there was a rapid change in the profile of disease. Large numbers of black people have moved from rural areas where they had to walk miles for water and fuel to the townships on the edge of the cities. The townships are overcrowded, unemployment is high and infrastructure, such as electricity and sanitation, poor or nonexistent. Fast-food outlets and imports of processed foods proliferated after markets re-opened.
Large numbers of people moved to townships, where infrastructure is poor.
“People coming here buy fatty, sugary food and drink because it’s cheap and it feels a luxury not to cook,” Puoane said. “Cooking fuel is expensive. They can buy from street vendors on credit. Fear of crime, often fuelled by alcohol, stops them taking exercise. They think they are happy because they are fat and when they go back to their rural areas people say, ‘you must be doing well, you have put on weight’.” Being thin and losing weight is associated with Aids and TB, which makes being overweight seem more acceptable….
The Guardian: Read the full article
Picture caption: Sisters, Nthombi, Patricia and Thembu Ndlovu, eat the R10.50 ikhota (bread, chips, polony, Russian and vienna, with tomato sauce and mustard) in Orange Farm, Drieziek, South Africa. Photograph: Greg Marinovich/Storytaxi.com