Yesterday, the IEA published my latest report—
The Fat Lie—which presents some of the evidence mentioned previously
on this blog related to calorie consumption and obesity. The following is a summary of some of the main points, but please read the whole report which can be
downloaded free of charge here.
Obesity prevalence has increased sharply in Britain since the 1970s.
Many public health campaigners portray Britain’s obesity ‘epidemic’ as
being caused by the increased availability of high calorie foods, sugary
drinks and larger servings in restaurants. This view has been reflected
in television programmes such as
The Men Who Made Us Fat (BBC),
which focus on the supposed rise in calorie consumption while paying
little attention to the other side of the equation: physical activity.
Some campaigners explicitly dismiss physical activity as a factor. For
example, Aseem Malhotra, science director of Action on Sugar,
says that ‘it’s time to bust the myth of physical activity and obesity’.
Today, the IEA has released
a briefing paper that demonstrates that this
conventional wisdom has no basis in fact. If people are ‘being bombarded every day by the food industry to consume more and more food’, as some
claim,
then the industry has failed. Consumption of calories - and of sugar
and fat - has fallen significantly while obesity rates have risen.
The Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (DEFRA) has
carried out annual surveys of the British diet since 1974. These surveys
are based on diet diaries compiled by a cross-section of the public and
are supported by till receipts (DEFRA, 2013). Shown in the graph below,
these data indicate a significant decline in daily per capita calorie
consumption in the last forty years, from 2,534 in 1974 to 1,990 in
2012. This represents a decline in energy consumption of 21.5 per cent.
This is corroborated by the National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS)
which began in the 1990s, the results of which can be compared to the
Dietary and Nutritional Survey of British Adults which holds data for
1986/87. These surveys collect data for food and drink consumed inside
and outside the home. Shown below, they indicate that average calorie
consumption has fallen by 9.8 per cent for 19-64 year olds since
1986/87.
Both datasets also show a decline in per capita consumption of
carbohydrates (including sugar) and fat (including saturated fat).
It is clear that average body weight has been rising for decades
while average calorie consumption has been declining. Assuming that the
laws of thermodynamics are correct, there can be only one explanation
for this: Britons are, on average, burning fewer calories than we used
to.
This should not be surprising. The transition from manual labour to
office work saw jobs in agriculture decline from eleven to two per cent
of employment in the twentieth century while manufacturing jobs declined
from 28 to 14 per cent of employment. Britons are walking less (from
255 miles per year in 1976 to 179 miles in 2010) and cycling less (from
51 miles per year in 1976 to 42 miles in 2010). Only 18 per cent of
adults report doing any moderate or vigorous physical activity at work
while 63 per cent never climb stairs at work and 40 per cent spend no
time walking at work.
Outside of work, 63 per cent report spending less
than ten minutes a day walking and 53 per cent do no sports or exercise
whatsoever. Add to this the ubiquity of labour-saving devices and it is
clear that Britons today have less need, and fewer opportunities, for
physical activity both in the workplace and at home.
Obesity features so often in the media that it is surprising that
the data shown in this briefing paper are not better known. The myth
that Britons are consuming more and more food has persisted for the
following two reasons:
Firstly, there is a tendency to import narratives from the USA
where, in contrast to the UK, calorie consumption rose in line with
obesity rates for many years. This dual trend had come to an end by
1990, however, and the role of chronic physical inactivity is beginning
to be acknowledged as the driver of rising obesity in the years since.
Secondly, the food supply is a more inviting target for health
campaigners than the sedentary lifestyles of the general public. A war
against ‘Big Food’ requires no stigmatisation of individuals (other than
the individuals who work in the food industry) and there are a
readymade set of policies available which have been tried and tested in
the campaigns against tobacco and alcohol. Instigating such a war,
however, requires the public to believe that food companies have acted
unscrupulously by stuffing unwitting consumers full of calories, forcing
large portions upon them and spiking their meals with sugar and fat.
The data shown in this paper are clearly not helpful to that narrative.
Such is the sensitivity of the public health lobby to this sort of
information that when two researchers published a paper showing that
sugar consumption had been declining in Australia for thirty years while
obesity had been rising, they were branded ‘a menace to public health’
and investigated for scientific misconduct. They have since been
exonerated, but the title of their study - ‘The Australian Paradox’ -
highlights how deeply rooted is the belief that obesity can only be the
result of increased sugar and/or calorie consumption at the population
level. As the evidence from the UK - and, in recent times, the USA -
shows, it is no paradox at all.
Reposted from the Institute of Economic Affairs.
See also
Tim Worstall and
James Dellingpole on this topic.
POSTSCRIPT: CHANNEL 4 NEWS
I went on Channel 4 News to talk about this report (you can watch the interview
here).
I confess to getting rather irritated half way through, which I regret because it doesn't go down well with viewers, but I had due cause. I had expected that whoever I was up against would say something along the lines of "OK, people are eating fewer calories but they're still eating too many calories considering their sedentary lifestyle". Then we could argue about policy. I wasn't expecting somebody to flat out deny that calorie consumption has fallen at all, let alone insist—without a shred of evidence—that it has actually
risen.
That, however, is what Prof. Mike Lean of Glasgow University decided to do. He pointed out that nutritional evidence is self-reported and is therefore prone to misreporting. He also pointed out that obese people tend to misreport more than slim people. If he had read my report he would have known that this was not news to me. From page 17-18 (under the heading 'limitations'):
Measuring the diet of the nation is not an exact science. Researchers rely on individuals keeping track of what they eat over a period of several days and it is well known that people tend to under-report the amount of food they consume due to a desire to deceive or - more commonly - a tendency to forget (over-reporting is also possible, though less common). The alternative method of keeping till receipts to check what food has been purchased is also problematic because some food is thrown away.
Researchers are well aware of these issues and have ways of testing the degree of under-reporting, notably with urine tests using ‘doubly labelled water’ which show how much energy a person has expended (and, therefore, how much energy a person of steady weight has consumed). Nevertheless, it is believed that Britons throw away about 10-20 per cent of the food they buy and under- report how much they eat by around 20 to 40 per cent (WRAP, 2013; Macdiarmid and Blundell, 1998).
When studying dietary trends over time the question is not whether people under-report but the extent to which under-reporting has changed over the years, if at all. Women and the obese are most likely to under-report and whilst the proportion of women in the population has remained stable, the proportion of obese people has clearly increased. It is therefore possible that more obesity has led to more under-reporting, but it is very unlikely that the population has become so forgetful and dishonest that the large, steady and virtually uninterrupted decline in calorie consumption reported in successive studies can be explained by misreporting alone.
So there is no doubt that people misreport. The only question is whether they systematically misreport far, far more today than ten, twenty or thirty years ago. I can find no evidence that they do and the other sources of evidence, such as food purchases, do not suggest otherwise. As I say in the quote above, food purchase data are not perfect either, because people throw away some food, but it defies common sense to believe that people throw away less food today than they did during the three day week or the winter of discontent.
Having knocked the evidence, Lean then dismissed it completely. Indeed, he said that the reality is the polar opposite of what the evidence shows. It's a common tactic with some keyboard warriors and some of the weaker industry lobbyists—skim a paper, look for the limitations, and then claim that the mere acknowledgement of limitations renders the whole paper worthless. Having dismissed the evidence, insert your own subjective opinions as if they were fact. Never mind that the vast majority of epidemiological evidence—including virtually all evidence on nutrition and cancer—is based on self-reporting and, therefore, is subject to misreporting.
When asked for evidence of his own, he started to quote a study, albeit a barely relevant study, from the USA, thereby proving a point I made on page 24 of
The Fat Lie when discussing the reasons why the myth of heavier eating has persisted:
Firstly, there is a tendency to import narratives from the USA where, in contrast to the UK, calorie consumption rose in line with obesity rates for many years.
But—what d'ya know?—the myth is falling apart in America too, as shown in the recent study published in the
American Journal of Medicine which found that:
Our findings do not support the popular notion that the rise in obesity in the U.S. can be attributed primarily to sustained increases over time in the average daily caloric intake of Americans... Average daily caloric intake did not change significantly [between 1988 and 2010]. BMI and waist circumference trends were associated with physical activity level but not caloric intake.
Lean's policy of point blank refusal to accept any of the evidence from
DEFRA, the
British Heart Foundation, the
Department of Health, the
Institute of Fiscal Studies and the
Office for National Statistics turned the discussion into a question of trust—who do you trust: the professor or the increasingly irate free market think tanker? Obviously, the average viewer has no inclination to dig into the data so is going to side with the professor.
|
British Heart Foundation, 'Coronary Heart Disease Statistics', 2012 |
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Institute for Fiscal Studies, 'Gluttony in England?', 2013 |
Krishnan Guru-Murthy helped him out by ending the interview with the tiresome question of whether 'Big Food' funded the IEA report. They didn't, of course. Readers of my books, articles and blog posts over the last five years know which topics spark my interest and I'm lucky enough to be able to write about more or less anything I like within the field of public health policy at the IEA. I don't need any suggestions from commercial interests. As for whether 'Big Food' funds the IEA at all, I honestly don't know and I honestly don't care. I don't really know which companies even make up 'the food industry' but it must be a very broad church (I'm from a long line of farmers so I guess I have 'links' with 'the food industry'). The IEA has always had a policy of donor confidentiality so I wouldn't say who funds it even I knew, which I usually don't. But I'm quite happy to say, as I did in this interview, that people are welcome to
assume that we are funded by x if that means that we can move on to talking about the issue at hand.
An appeal to authority and a little innuendo about funding goes a long way with the average couch potato—probably more so on Channel 4 News than on most programmes—so I don't doubt that Mike Lean won the debate in many people's eyes. Hey, ho. Hopefully some people read the report regardless.