WHO Calls for Punitive Booze and Soda Taxes on the Anniversary of Prohibition Repeal
Nannies never fall out of love with failed authoritarianism and curbs on freedom of choice.

How do you mark the anniversary of Prohibition's repeal? At Reason we celebrate the hard-won victory of (relative) sanity that led to the passage of the 21st Amendment repealing the 18th Amendment and clearing the way for Americans to again (legally) consume alcoholic beverages. We also point to lessons that can be learned from failed efforts to use the force of law to prevent people from making their own choices.
But if you're an international nanny-stater, you use the day to call for restrictions on popular beverages.
You are reading The Rattler from J.D. Tuccille and Reason. Get more of J.D.'s commentary on government overreach and threats to everyday liberty.
International Nannies Push "Healthier" Behavior
"WHO calls on countries to increase taxes on alcohol and sugary sweetened beverages," the World Health Organization headlined a December 5 press release, precisely 90 years after the ratification of the 21st Amendment. "The World Health Organization (WHO) is releasing today new data that show a low global rate of taxes being applied to unhealthy products such as alcohol and sugary sweetened beverages (SSBs). The findings highlight that the majority of countries are not using taxes to incentivize healthier behaviours."
Admittedly, WHO is a meddlesome world organization, so one can't expect it to always be aware of important political dates in any one country. Still, the irony is rich enough to make you reach for something sweet and buzz-inducing. Why not double down on control-freakery on a day when Americans with a modicum of historical awareness reflect on the defeat of such efforts?
That said, WHO didn't call for outright bans on sweet and boozy drinks. The idea is to hike prices through the tax system so that peopleâpresumably those with less moneyâcan't afford them and therefore become slimmer and more sober.
"Taxes that increase alcohol prices by 50% would help avert over 21 million deaths over 50 years and generate nearly US$17 trillion in additional revenues," insists WHO.
WHO also points to polling data showing that majorities in multiple countries support sin taxes on alcohol, sugary drinks, and tobacco. Presumably, those surveyed could purchase fewer such products of their own accord but want pressure applied from above on those who might choose differently.
But what people support in the abstract isn't the same thing as what they actually do when living under real-life policies. Laws and unintended consequences have a funny way of colliding again and again.
Nanny Policies Meet Unintended Consequences
"Substitution to untaxed beverages with no added sugars (e.g., water) is an intended goal of SSB [sugary sweetened beverage] taxes," noted a 2021 brief from the University of Illinois Chicago's Policy, Practice and Prevention Research Center. "However, substitution to unhealthful products is a possible unintended consequence. For example, a tax on SSBs may induce substitution to sweets or salty snacks, if an individual is looking to obtain alternative high-sugar or high-calorie foods."
In fact, research on the results of Seattle's soda tax found that increased prices drove people to buy more sweet snacks and beer. That means calories consumption just shifted around in terms of their sources, not necessarily reducing what was ultimately consumed.
"There is no evidence from anywhere around the world which shows that these policies lead to a reduction in weight, obesity or even overall calorie intake," comments Christopher Snowdon of the Institute of Economic Affairs in the U.K., which has had a sugar tax for five years.
People can also evade taxes by crossing borders to cheaper jurisdictions, as Norwegians did to purchase lower-taxed sweets in Sweden when their country adopted a sugar tax. Americans have been jumping city and state lines for decades to escape punitive sin taxes on alcohol, as well as shipping and distribution restrictions that limit choices.
"High taxes and limited enforcement have New York City awash in illegal booze and cigarettes," Crain's New York Business trumpeted a few years ago.
Cigarettes are a perfect case study because taxes on them are so high: $4.35 in New York state, plus $1.50 in New York City. That creates an incentive to find ways around the sin tax, legal or otherwise.
"Excessive tax rates on cigarettes induce substantial black and gray market movement of tobacco products into high-tax states from low-tax states or foreign sources," warns the Tax Foundation. "New York has the highest inbound smuggling activity, with an estimated 54.5 percent of cigarettes consumed in the state deriving from smuggled sources in 2021."
Regulators of the newly legal (in some states) marijuana industry seem dedicated to replicating all of the errors of tobacco and alcohol regulation. They're hobbling legal operators and keeping the already thriving underground market awash in cash.
"Steep taxes and heavy regulation are making it hard for licensed pot sellers to operate in some states, driving more producers and buyers to illegal outlets," Zusha Elinson and Jimmy Vielkind wrote in The Wall Street Journal earlier this year.
The lessons of Prohibition may be fading into the mists of history, but that article was published eight months ago. There's no reason to believe that alcohol taxes already being evaded where they're too high won't continue to be evaded if hiked even further. And the evidence already suggests that taxes and restrictions on sugary drinksâor any other "sin" enjoyed by the publicâwill have the same outcome.
What About Freedom of Choice?
Of course, all of this treats high taxes and other efforts "to incentivize healthier behaviours," as WHO puts it, as just a set of policy choices among many, to be adopted if they work or discarded otherwise. But there's also the reason that people so vigorously undermine restrictive policies: They want to be free to make their own choices.
Prohibition failed because it was actively resisted by drinkers who resented being deprived of their freedom of choice. Taxes on sugar, alcohol, and other sins are similarly fought by people who believe they have the right to make their own decisions, even if public-health nannies disapprove. Freedom has a value of its own, separate from the obesity and mortality figures bureaucrats obsessively peruse.
"Taxing unhealthy products creates healthier populations. It has a positive ripple effect across society - less disease and debilitation and revenue for governments to provide public services," huffed Dr. RƱdiger Krech, Director of Health Promotion for WHO.
Some of us might say that freedom is what gives life value, and that slimming us down and extending our span on this Earth at the expense of our liberty is a lousy tradeoff.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Who called for more taxes?
WHO indeed.
Sooooo...We've gone from Bootleggers and Baptists to Blue Helmets and Mullshs in 90 years and still haven't learned anything.
What will baptists do now. They hate the UN, WHO and any other appearance of world governance yet that world government wants to make booze more expensive so people will drink less. I guess politics really does make for strange bedfellows.
Here in Corrupticut they are trickier;they doubled the bottle deposit to $.10 which will deter some fat slobs from buying Diet Coke.
Let those with a modicum of sense benefit.
Yo, ho me hearties. Raise the black flag and hike the taxes some more (FWIW, the sentient already know that taxes amount to more of the final price of both gasoline and whiskey that the raw materials from which they are made, and exceed, per unit, the profit enjoyed by the makers of those two consumable products). Raise'em high, then higher. Consider having a French salt tax on whiskey, whereby you must buy a minimum amount of it each year or pay a punitive tax for failure to comply. Not much way to get away from the gasoline taxes (and perhaps mileage taxes to boot) though such taxes may provide the secondary benefit of directing vehicle choice). And we've never had the experience of those who work by the light of the moon producing and selling untaxed whiskey. Have we?
Progressives looking to pop the top on taking even more from others. The results of their efforts are often taxing.
Progressives are bitter. They garnish their spending through taxes.
Progressives like to gin up reasons for taking money from citizens.
Too bad they donât have an ounce of common sense with an added ounce of intelligence to mix everything together in a complete idea that would shake the world.
They're rather sloe in the head.
And jigger with the numbers until we are both shaken and stirred.
đ
đ
I keep scotch,Irish,bourbon and Canadian at home, but, I don't drink soda. I got that going for me.
Great barter items in a Survivalist/Prepper SHTF scenario even if you don't drink.
Pour sarc.
McDonalds should offer a McForty extra value meal.
16 dollars due to Bidenomics.
Seriously, at least some New York City McDonald's did offer beer.
Some of us might say that freedom is what gives life value, and that slimming us down and extending our span on this Earth at the expense of our liberty is a lousy tradeoff.
And some of us might say Dr. RƱdiger Krech is lying through his teeth for political ends, regardless of whether it gets more people killed by diseases like COVID, like the WHO pays him to.
"Taxing unhealthy products creates healthier populations. It has a positive ripple effect across societyâless disease and debilitation and revenue for governments to provide public services," huffed Dr. RƱdiger Krech, Director of Health Promotion for WHO.
Proposition without proof, Dr. Krech. Defend your assertion with actual facts. Where in the world has this happened? Be sure to include the costs of more monitoring and enforcement, and the social costs of increased defiance of the law and contempt for government.
All the health benefits, if any, mean people live longer so their bodies breaking down from age can put an even heavier load on the medical facilities.
Not to mention if you treat your body like an amusement park instead of a temple you're likely to die before the Adult Diapers years hit.
"That said, WHO didn't call for outright bans on sweet and boozy drinks. The idea is to hike prices through the tax system so that peopleâpresumably those with less moneyâcan't afford them and therefore become slimmer and more sober."
Prohibition light; you will have nothing, eat bugs, and FUCKING LIKE IT! Rev Arty's betters know better than you.
Now that the WHO proposes a win/win government revenue generating policy change that will also reduce alcohol and sugar consumption (and greatly improve public health), Tuccille repeats many of the tobacco industryâs lies (to defend and promote unhealthy excessive alcohol and sugar consumption).
As one who campaigned to sue cigarette manufacturers and sharply increase cigarette taxes (and ban indoor smoking, halt marketing to youth, and keep very low risk vapor products legal), Iâm very pleased that cigarette consumption in the US has dropped >75% since 1984 (from >32 billion packs to <8 billion packs).
Meanwhile, teen cigarette smoking rates have plummeted from 35% to 2%, and young adult (18-25) smoking rates declined from 35% to 7%, due primarily to cigarette price hikes (via litigation and taxation), indoor smoking bans, and the advent of vaping.
While Tuccille may prefer that 35% of American teens and adults were still addicted to cigarettes, the overwhelming majority of Americans and voters strongly support our campaign that raised the price of cigarettes from $1 to $8 per pack.
I wonder if you have any awareness of how much government contributed to tobacco's evil. Well, no, I don't. You are an elitist statist fuck.
The government "justice" system made it impossible for people to sue tobacco companies for their lies.
The government subsidized tobacco.
The government shielded tobacco companies from being held accountable.
Perhaps you should just fuck off, slaver, and find some spine to go along with the principles you so clearly lack.
So you're one of the jerks who provides smuggling revenue to organized crime and terrorist organizations? So you're one of the jerks who led to the death-by-cop of Freddie Gray?
If everyone smoked 2-3 packs per day, and consumed a fifth of distilled spirits per day, Social Security and Medicare wouldn't be looking at future bankruptcy.
You're not wrong. This is one of those I don't get it positions. Governments across the world are facing a crisis of aging populations and low birth rates which spell doom for their statist ways. Why do they want people to live longer?
It's like conservatives fighting against abortion. They gripe about poor women having too many kids and straining the welfare system yet want to deprive those poor women of the ability to control the size of their families through abortion. Rich white girls can travel overseas for an abortion so a ban won't stop them. Bans on abortion only prevent the poor from accessing an abortion.
If they were serious about wanting to cull potential Democrat voters they'd offer a cash reward for getting an abortion.
By the way, there are plenty of incentives in a free society and a free market to not smoke. Landlords donât permit smoking in their units because the nicotine absorbs into the walls and requires deadly KILZ to cover the stain.
Coffee shops have long forbidden smoking because the smoke absorbs into the beans and makes the brew taste awful.
Restaurants separated smoking and non-smoking sections before smoking bans.
Any places that have flammables like fuel or cloth have always banned smoking.
And while people may smoke after sex, you never heard of anyone smoking during sex.
And none of these voluntary free market curbs on smoking involve taking one innocent life.
Smoking just became more taboo among younger generations because its negative health effects were brought to light. I'm guessing many million more teens vape now and will stop once that becomes more taboo.
Besides that though, just let people determine what to put in their bodies. If they get sick and die, well, that's their problem.
Tuccille fails to mention that beer tax revenue has declined sharply in most states during the past 8 decades.
Here in PA, the beer tax has been $.01/pint since 1946, while the average price of a pint of beer increased tenfold (from $.25 to $2.50), meaning the beer tax rate dropped by 90%.
It's the spirits taxes that really are huge. For cheap vodka or something like that, the federal tax itself is the majority of the sale price in a lot of states.
At that rate, one (me) wonders if the tax is worth the cost of collecting it. Don't ask out loud, of course, or the New Prohibitionists will be trying to raise it to parity with the price, so a pint costs $5 and your local drinkers will be on your lawn with torches and pitchforks.
apparently no one has learned anything from the original Prohibition of alcohol. People drank anyhow, and we experienced a massive rise in criminal organizations, crime and murder. Guess we may have to learn that again... đ
WHO is a worthless Maoist jobs program for hamas supporters and global south leftists.
Once WHO was useful. They eradicated smallpox. Then they lost their way and were taken over by the social scientists.
âTaxes that increase alcohol prices by 50% would . generate nearly US$17 trillion in additional revenues,"
Well, that gave the game away, didnât it?
This has nothing to do with health, which is why they do not call for an outright ban.. This is everything to do with having the governments that fund the WHO Squeeze more money out of taxpayers.
No mention of how high taxes would encourage home brewing and distilling.
Inflation has encouraged me to home brew.
I'll admit it's amusing that the WHO is calling for alcohol taxes.
Do they really want the people to be sober while looking at what they're up to?
Two outstanding quotes that deserve praise of a repeat....
"who believe they have the right to make their own decisions, even if public-health nannies disapprove. Freedom has a value of its own, separate from the obesity and mortality figures bureaucrats obsessively peruse."
"Some of us might say that freedom is what gives life value, and that slimming us down and extending our span on this Earth at the expense of our liberty is a lousy tradeoff."