for such a tax to be effective it needs to be high, and thats going to be extremly unpopular.
more to the point though, if there is so much less production, energy and manufacturing involved in making meat free, why is it more expensive?
Economies of scale perhaps involved in manufacture, distribution and availability?
Economies of scale perhaps involved in manufacture, distribution and availability?
Education not taxation. As a counter I’d also encourage a discussion on all processed foods, Veg and Meat highlighting how unhealthy they are. In particular the whole industry behind Veg alternatives that are not as healthy as they seem but are promoted as healthy alternatives to meat.
Education not taxation. As a counter I’d also encourage a discussion on all processed foods, Veg and Meat highlighting how unhealthy they are. In particular the whole industry behind Veg alternatives that are not as healthy as they seem but are promoted as healthy alternatives to meat.
thats the obvious go-to answer. trouble is the chap (and industry) want to tell us how much cheaper production and manufacture of plant protein is, so where are the efficiencies lost?
thats the obvious go-to answer. trouble is the chap (and industry) want to tell us how much cheaper production and manufacture of plant protein is, so where are the efficiencies lost?
I don't understand your follow-up? The previous answer is the answer... non-meat alternatives have not reached anywhere near the scale to make them cost-competitive with meat.
I'm not convinced on a tax, it paints some pretty bleak pictures in my head - but we've already got the soft drinks levy and that has gone down ok I think. So a tax on unhealthy foods (Dominoes mighty meaty costing you 50p extra) that funds green and health initiatives is probably a good thing. But I think we need a big education push alongside it, because otherwise the less well engaged among the population will just keep feeding their kids chicken nuggets and simply see their food bills go up, and struggle even further.
When plant based or lab-grown meat hits an economy of scale, and becomes cheaper than normal meat, with little discernible difference, then I think we'll see an enormous change in attitudes. For most people, price is king. A bit of tax to help accelerate the switch, could be sensible.
I don't understand your follow-up? The previous answer is the answer... non-meat alternatives have not reached anywhere near the scale to make them cost-competitive with meat.
I'm not convinced on a tax, it paints some pretty bleak pictures in my head - but we've already got the soft drinks levy and that has gone down ok I think. So a tax on unhealthy foods (Dominoes mighty meaty costing you 50p extra) that funds green and health initiatives is probably a good thing. But I think we need a big education push alongside it, because otherwise the less well engaged among the population will just keep feeding their kids chicken nuggets and simply see their food bills go up, and struggle even further.
When plant based or lab-grown meat hits an economy of scale, and becomes cheaper than normal meat, with little discernible difference, then I think we'll see an enormous change in attitudes. For most people, price is king. A bit of tax to help accelerate the switch, could be sensible.
I don't understand your follow-up? The previous answer is the answer... non-meat alternatives have not reached anywhere near the scale to make them cost-competitive with meat.