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How healthy is your diet?
Healthy and unhealthy shoppers
Shoppers are continuing to pile their trolleys and baskets with unhealthy
food, despite the Government’s focus on tackling Britain’s obesity crisis.
A survey of food-buying patterns of 12 million consumers has found that, in
the past four years, 44 per cent of people have made no change to their
eating habits. Only 8 per cent of shoppers have moved towards a healthier
diet, while almost as many are deliberately shunning a good diet and eating
more junk food.
Even shoppers who normally try to eat healthily fall off the wagon if there is
an upheaval in their lives such as the arrival of a new baby, divorce, a
wedding, moving house, losing a job or being promoted at work.
The findings, from dunnhumby, the retail consultants, who have scrutinised the
sales data of 10,000 everyday ingredients clocked up on Tesco loyalty cards
as well as interviewed 2,000 customers, suggest that it will take more than
a generation before Britain becomes a nation of healthy eaters.
The findings will come as a blow to the efforts of Caroline Flint, the Public
Health Minister, and the Food Standards Agency, who are attempting to
encourage people to eat a more nutritious diet.
The study also appears to suggest that consumers need the help of the agency’s
traffic-light system of red, amber and green alerts on packs to help them to
choose a healthier mix of food. The traffic lights are being strongly
opposed by food manufacturers and Tesco, who claim that the system is
simplistic and demonises food.
A surprising feature of the study is that there is little difference in the
cost of a healthy shopping basket and an unhealthy one. A typical healthy
basket costs an average £71.78 compared with £71.18 for an unhealthy one.
Healthy shoppers were identified for buying organic and ecofriendly products
and food with labels such as fresh, lite or low fat, or food from the
healthy-living ranges.
Unhealthy baskets typically contained value or extra lines, indicating that
people were looking for the cheapest food that they could find. It suggests
that many shoppers still think that healthy eating is expensive. But
shoppers also enjoy a treat, and sales of chocolate and alcoholic drinks
have shown no decline.
They also like to “scrimp and splurge”. Researchers identified people who
chose cheaper products to pay for a treat, either a cream cake, gourmet food
for a pet or a DVD.
Martin Hayward, director of consumer strategy for dunnhumby, said: “Most of us
are neither totally healthy nor totally unhealthy eaters.”
He said that worry about the cost of food prevented many people from eating
healthily and yet the analysis had shown that there was little difference in
the price of a healthy versus unhealthy basket.
Mr Hayward said: “We believe the distance between healthy and unhealthy eating
is because people don’t know how to cook and have a ‘can’t cook, won’t cook’
approach, making them heavily reliant on processed foods and ready meals.”
The findings are intended to explore new ways to help consumers to eat a
healthy diet, he said. The analysis also bolsters policy statements from
Tony Blair and David Cameron, the Conservative leader, who have promised to
bring cookery classes back into schools.
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