Do financial constraint and perceived stress modify the effects of food tax schemes on food purchases: moderation analyses in a virtual supermarket experiment

Publication date

2024

Authors

PEN Consortium
Djojosoeparto, Sanne KISNI 0000000506363520
Poelman, Maartje P.ISNI 0000000392685643
Eykelenboom, Michelle
Beenackers, Mariëlle A
Steenhuis, Ingrid H M
van Stralen, Maartje M
Olthof, Margreet R
Renders, Carry M
van Lenthe, Frank J.ISNI 0000000138507614

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Objective: To investigate whether financial constraint and perceived stress modify the effects of food-related taxes on the healthiness of food purchases. Design: Moderation analyses were conducted with data from a trial where participants were randomly exposed to: a control condition with regular food prices, an sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) tax condition with a two-tiered levy on the sugar content in SSB (5-8 g/100 ml: €0·21 per l and ≥8 g/100 ml: €0·28 per l) or a nutrient profiling tax condition where products with Nutri-Score D or E were taxed at a 20 percent level. Outcome measures were overall healthiness of food purchases (%), energy content (kcal) and SSB purchases (litres). Effect modification was analysed by adding interaction terms between conditions and self-reported financial constraint or perceived stress in regression models. Outcomes for each combination of condition and level of effect modifier were visualised. Setting: Virtual supermarket. Participants: Dutch adults (n 386). Results: Financial constraint or perceived stress did not significantly modify the effects of food-related taxes on the outcomes. Descriptive analyses suggest that in the control condition, the overall healthiness of food purchases was lowest, and SSB purchases were highest among those with moderate/high levels of financial constraint. Compared with the control condition, in a nutrient profiling tax condition, the overall healthiness of food purchases was higher and SSB purchases were lower, especially among those with moderate/high levels of financial constraint. Such patterns were not observed for perceived stress. Conclusion: Further studies with larger samples are recommended to assess whether food-related taxes differentially affect food purchases of subgroups.

Keywords

Financial constraint, Food-related taxes, Healthiness food purchases, Perceived stress, Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health, Nutrition and Dietetics, Medicine (miscellaneous), SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

PEN Consortium, Djojosoeparto, S K, Poelman, M P, Eykelenboom, M, Beenackers, M A, Steenhuis, I H M, van Stralen, M M, Olthof, M R, Renders, C M, van Lenthe, F J & Kamphuis, C B M 2024, 'Do financial constraint and perceived stress modify the effects of food tax schemes on food purchases : moderation analyses in a virtual supermarket experiment', Public Health Nutrition, vol. 27, no. 1, e38. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1368980024000077