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NEWS
UK government announces £520m 'sugar tax'
POSTED 16 Mar 2016 . BY Jak Phillips
Chancellor George Osborne said action must be taken to curb sugar intake
... The UK government has announced plans to introduce a surprise £520m levy on sugary drinks to tackle the country's burgeoning obesity problem.

Delivering his spring budget today, chancellor George Osborne said the average UK five-year-old consumes their own body weight in sugar every year and measures must be taken to prevent this.

"Doing the right thing for the next generation is what this government and this Budget is about," Osborne told MPs.

"No matter how difficult and how controversial it is. You cannot have a long-term plan for the country unless you have a long-term plan for our children's health care."

A sugar levy will be introduced on soft drinks from 2018, giving drinks companies – whose shares were sent tumbling by the news – time to adjust. The chancellor said there will be two bands for the levy – which drinks companies can choose whether to pass on to consumers – and added that pure fruit juices will be excluded.

Expected to raise £520m, the money will be used to double the amount spent on school sports. In addition, schools will be able to apply for money to extend the school day with more sports activities.

The announcement comes as a surprise as it was initially thought that the government preferred a product reformulation approach to direct tax on sugar products. The government's much-delayed Childhood Obesity Strategy had been expected to eschew a sugar levy until today's announcement.

The measure marks a major win for anti-sugar campaigners including celebrity chef Jamie Oliver, who have placed increasing pressure on the government to take decisive action.