More expensive steak, cheaper tomatoes, but the same total cost for the average basket of groceries at the supermarket. A comprehensive study, led by researchers from Chalmers University of Technology in Sweden, has analyzed the potential effects of a food tax shift—where VAT is removed from healthy foods and levies are introduced on foods that have a negative impact on the climate.
A food tax shift could save lives—without a price hike in the average shopping basket
Reader’s Picks
-
When humans interact with each other and engage in everyday activities, they typically follow various undefined rules, also known as [...]
-
Research involving Pompeu Fabra University has explored the relationship between having or not having a romantic partner with changes in [...]
-
Women do the majority of “thinking work” in households, regardless of their employment status or how much they earn, new [...]
