The mayor of US city Detroit is planning a ‘fastfood tax,’ with customers paying more for burgers, pizzas and hot dogs.
The move is designed to slim down Detroit’s huge budget deficit and also tackle its growing problem of obesity, the BBC reported. Critics have dubbed the proposal a ‘fat tax’, claiming it would unfairly penalise the poor.
The tax is the brainchild of Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick who is seeking solutions to the twin problems of an expanding gulf in the city’s finances and an increasingly obese workforce.
Detroit’s city council has a deficit of more than $300m and faces restrictions on the amount of money it can raise through conventional income and property taxes.
Detroit also has a problem with its weight, health experts say. Men’s Health magazine labelled it America’s fattest city in 2004.

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By GlobalDataMayor Kilpatrick’s office told the BBC that the proposal was a tax raising measure and was not designed to influence people’s eating habits. “We always hope that Detroit citizens will become a little bit healthier in one way or another,” said James Canning, a spokesman for Mayor Kilpatrick. “However, the purpose of this is to generate revenue first and foremost.”
Mr Canning added that the Mayor also supported efforts to promote a healthier lifestyle by encouraging people to take more exercise.
The Mayor has not yet defined what constitutes a fastfood restaurant although his spokesman said it was likely to include any outlet where people pay for their food in advance.
The 2% tax – would be levied on top of the state’s existing 6% restaurant tax .
The proposal will have to be approved by the state legislature and by Detroit inhabitants in a referendum before it becomes law.
Nevertheless, restaurant owners have responded angrily to the proposal.
“We think it is extremely counterproductive to say to those people who have provided jobs, who have provided growth ‘We’re going to levy on you a special tax that we don’t levy on anyone else'”, Andy Deloney, from the Michigan Restaurant Association, told the Associated Press.
Detroit isn’t the only city to look to the tax system to tackle obesity.
A member of the New York state congress has argued for a 1% tax on junk-food and TV commercials to finance an anti-obesity drive.