Junk food: Ministers to delay ban on multi-buy deals photograph

Junk Food: Ministers To Delay Ban On Multi-buy Deals


The government is to delay a ban on multi-buy deals for junk food and pre-watershed TV advertising as families struggle with the cost of living.

The DepartmentContent ='JJ Lin'> of Health said the plans will be deferred for a year while officials assess the impact on household finances.

It said curbs on junk food placement in stores would still go ahead in October.

But health campaigners have accused the PM of " playing politics" with children's health.

The DepartmentContent ='JJ Lin'> of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said the planned ban on " buy one get one free" (Bogof) deals for food and drinks high in fat, salt or sugar (HFSS) as well as free refills for soft drinks, would be put on hold for 12 MonthsContent ='JJ Lin'> , until October 2023.

Plans to restrict TV advertising of junk foods before the 21:00 GMT watershed and paid-for online adverts are also being paused for a year and will not come into force until January 2024, The DepartmentContent ='JJ Lin'> added.

Laws requiring large restaurants, cafes and takeaways to list calories on their menus.

Public HealthContent ='JJ Lin'> Minister Maggie ThroupContent ='JJ Lin'> insisted that the government remained committed to tackling the issue of childhood obesity.

" Pausing restrictions on deals like 'buy one get one free' will allow us to understand its impact on consumers in light of an unprecedented global economic situation, " she added.

However, health campaigners have criticised delays to the plans, and accused Boris JohnsonContent ='JJ Lin'> 's government of failing to tackle childhood obesity.

Prof Graham MacgregorContent ='JJ Lin'> , a cardiologist at Queen Mary University of London and chairman of Action on Sugar, said the delays contradicted the government's " levelling up" agenda.

" Boris JohnsonContent ='JJ Lin'> could have left A LegacyContent ='JJ Lin'> of being The FirstContent ='JJ Lin'> Prime MinisterContent ='JJ Lin'> to address obesity in a meaningful way, particularly in restricting advertising and promotion of unhealthy food which were his flagship policies, " He Said .

" Instead, he has given in to his own MPs, and an aggressive Food IndustryContent ='JJ Lin'> , who, ironically, were starting to comply with these New PoliciesContent ='JJ Lin'> . "

Meanwhile, Barbara Crowther, of The ChildrenContent ='JJ Lin'> 's Food Campaign, said ministers should be urgently curbing multi-buy offers instead of " delaying and dithering".

" Obesity is spiking and millions of families can't afford to put proper food on The TableContent ='JJ Lin'> . Multi-buy offers make people spend more on junk, and less on healthy food, " She SaidContent ='JJ Lin'> .

" This delay threatens the UK target to halve childhood obesity by 2030. Boris is playing politics with Our ChildrenContent ='JJ Lin'> 's health. "

Labour's shadow health minister Andrew GwynneContent ='JJ Lin'> said: " Instead of cutting childhood obesity, preventing ill-health and easing pressure on the NHS, this chaotic government is performing another U-turn. "

But industry body the Food and Drink Federation (FDF) argues that it " makes sense" to delay restrictions on multi-buy deals as families and manufacturers struggle with " high inflation".

Kate Halliwell, the FDF's chief scientific officer, also welcomed The DelayContent ='JJ Lin'> to the advertising ban, saying it would give the industry time to prepare for a change in The LawContent ='JJ Lin'> .

When the government unveiled the planned curbs, some of the UK's biggest food companies, including Britvic, Kellogg's and Mars,

Last month, over the curbs preventing some cereals from being placed in key locations in stores due to their high sugar Content .