Healthy foods are out of reach for the country’s poorest people because they cannot find them in shops near where they live or afford to buy them, claims a new report from cross-party think tank Demos.
Their Turn the Tables report explored public attitudes towards healthy eating based on a survey of 1,000 Brits and expert interviews and found that the food market in the UK is not working for consumers.
Demos researchers found that there are too many barriers for people to eat healthily with estimates based on their findings reporting that 20 million adults cannot afford healthy foods while 19 million find themselves in food deserts, unable to find healthy foods in shops where they live.
Both cost and ease drive people towards unhealthy foods – as is the case for a third of the people surveyed with taste the main driver for 43 per cent of people. Although 40 per cent of the consumers quizzed said that healthy foods tasted better – more than 25 per cent preferred the taste of unhealthy foods.
There is an opportunity for the government to be even bolder, and pioneers for a new era of food innovation
But nearly a fifth of those earning under £20,000 say cost is the most important reason for relying on unhealthy foods in their diet. That’s twice as likely as those earning £40,000 and above.
Boris Johnson recently unveiled the government’s plans to fight back against obesity, including banning junk food adverts before 9pm, ending ‘buy one, get one free’ deals on unhealthy foods and display calories more prominently on menus. With 63 per cent of adults in England classed as overweight or living with obesity, the public health crisis is both costly and puts strain on the NHS at a time when it is focused on tackling the Covid-19 pandemic.