Health Public Good
Public Health as a Public Good
The United States has one of the lowest cost food options available to its consumers in the world. For an extended period, people assumed that this was a benefit of capitalism and that competition had helped push down the prices and made food available at lower costs through the market. However, many externalities have arisen in these circumstances that are now pointing researchers to question the consequences of having mass processed food available to consumers. The United States, as well as many other industrialized nations, currently has epidemic rates of obesity as well as the related obesity diseases such as heart disease and diabetes.
This trend is not restricted to just adult and the obesity rates among children have subsequently risen as well. This has made many instructions and activists compare the effects of poor diets and their health consequences to smoking cigarettes and the health consequences that result from inhaling tobacco smoke. If this comparison is reasonable, then many regulations may be relevant to the overconsumption of the types of foods that the fast food industry offers; especially regarding children. This analysis will consider the role of various stakeholders in the debate about what to do about the public health crisis that is unfolding in the United States.
Public Health
There are many different factors that can be attributed to the high rates of obesity that have developed in the United States. Americans have the lowest-cost food supply in the world and spend the lowest proportion of disposable income on food and until recently, no one has seriously questioned whether a low-cost food supply brought anything but benefits to the United States (Drewnoski and Darmon 270S). The low cost of foods produced in the U.S. are a result of greater production yields, higher efficiency rates, and in some cases there are massive farm subsidies paid to farmers from public funding that artificially drive the prices of certain food products down.
Two-thirds of U.S. adults are overweight or obese and in general, rates of overweight and obesity are higher for African-American and Hispanic women than Caucasian women, higher for Hispanic men than Caucasian and African-American men, higher in the South and Midwest, and tend to increase with age; research also shows that the heaviest Americans have become even heavier the past decade (Food Research and Action Center). Therefore, not only are the obesity rates higher, but they are disproportionately higher among certain demographics. There are correlations between obesity and health in different income demographics as well. Americans who earn more typically spend more money on high quality and more nutritious foods than those with low incomes.
Therefore, there is something of a paradox in the United States agricultural system and the government's role in the combating the epidemic of obesity. One the one hand, says Michael Pollan, a University of California professor, the federal government is campaigning against the obesity epidemic while on the other it is actually subsidizing it by "writing farmers a check for every bushel of corn they can grow (Chicago Defender 1)." Corn is a chief ingredient in many lower cost foods through the addition of high fructose corn sugar which is inexpensive and calorie rich. Therefore many low cost foods use high fructose corn sugar to enhance their products because it's readily available, cheap, and energy dense.
Despite the perceived benefits of having access to inexpensive foods, the reality is that it is not as beneficial as it may seem on first appearance. The good things aren't, it seems, really good, because the extra pounds they bring us increase our risks of heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure, stroke, sleep apnea, arthritis, gallbladder disease and some cancers (Chicago Defender 1). The implications that the inexpensive foods have for at risk populations is typically not counted in any economic analysis's and therefore represents a form of externality that is hard to quantify directly. However, such foods have many implications on public health as well as the health care system in the United States.
The health care system is among the most expensive in the world and the costs continue to grow at an alarming rate. Growing numbers of Americans are uninsured while the costs keep rising (annual growth rate, 6.7%), and the public is increasingly worried about the issue; the U.S. spends more money on health care than any other nation in the world and by 2017, we will be spending about $13,000 per person, according to the annual projection by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and less...
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