Australian public health experts contacted by Crikey say sports sponsorship by fast-food giants KFC and McDonald’s and the like should be banned. They also believe sports stars should be banned from endorsing foods that are unhealthily high in fat and sugar.
“We should start with a ban on unhealthy food sponsorship of children’s sport,” says Jane Martin, of the Obesity Policy Coalition, “as this is the most urgent issue. Following this should be a ban on all junk-food sponsorship of sport.
“We should ban junk food and alcohol sponsorship of sport and we should ban sports people from advertising these products at other times and through any medium,” says Sydney University’s professor Stephen Colagiuri, one of the government’s expert advisers on diabetes.
“It has been done for smoking and the same rules could be applied for alcohol and junk food.”
Professor Sandra Jones — co-author of the report I Eat Milo To Make Me Run Faster — agrees: “We can and should prohibit the sponsorship of children’s sport by fast-food companies and manufacturers of nutritionally poor foods (i.e. those that are high in fat, salt and/or sugar) … because we are talking about children and the development of food-related attitudes and behaviours that have the potential to influence their health and well-being for the rest of their lives.
“The same applies to sponsorship by sporting celebrities,” says professor Jones, who is one of the leading experts on food marketing to children. “Not only are these role models extremely influential … the association of sport with certain foods [via sponsorship/celebrity endorsement] also misleads children into believing that the advertised foods are healthy and even necessary for sporting performance.”
But could sport exist without this money? “Absolutely,” says professor Colagiuri, “The end of the sporting world did not occur when the tobacco bans were introduced and many top level sporting events survive without junk food company sponsorship or advertising.”
The campaigner who led Australia’s fight against tobacco sponsorship of sports, professor Simon Chapman, who also favours a ban, agrees.
“The refrain that sports will lose money when a category of advertiser or sponsor has to exit the playing field can be tested against the historic record of what happened with the demise of tobacco advertising. It went from radio and TV in September 1976, and then from print and sporting sponsorship in the early 1990s. If there is any graph showing that there was the slightest dip in total advertising receipts in any medium following these bans, they have yet to be paraded. The fight to retain tobacco advertising was protracted and vicious, so data like that would have been gold. It just doesn’t exist, because plenty of other products lined up to fill the gaps.
“‘The Marlboro Open became the Ford Open and later the Kia Open … And guess what, cricket, football, tennis and racing didn’t die.”
Crikey’s investigation of sports sponsorship by food companies suggests a 20/20 rule applies, at least in the case of the AFL and Cricket Australia. Roughly 20% of those sports’ total revenue comes from sponsorship, and roughly 20% of that sponsorship money comes from food companies. That means as little as 4% of total revenue might be at risk from a ban. Yet food companies get massive promotional exposure for this modest outlay.
The figures at grassroots level appear similar. According to the NSW Cancer Council’s Kathy Chapman, co-author of a 2010 study into sponsorship of children’s sport, “Of 347 sponsors identified in junior sports clubs, only 17% were food or beverage companies. And for most clubs, less than a quarter of their income came from sponsorship, so it is a relatively small proportion of their income base, even though it provides major promotional opportunities to sponsors.”
Crikey asked Sports Minister Mark Arbib whether he was in favour of a ban. Having effectively said he was not and that he believed “the key to tackling childhood obesity is to get kids active and away from the television or PlayStation,” he flicked us on to Health Minister Nicola Roxon. Crikey went to her office for comment but didn’t get a reply before deadline.
We didn’t feel the need to ask Tony Abbott who, as Health Minister in the Howard government, dismissed concerns about food marketing to children raised by the ABC’s Four Corners:
TONY ABBOTT: It’s a pretty sad view of humanity to think that we are in some way programmed by the stuff we see on television.
TICKY FULLERTON: What about children under eight?
TONY ABBOTT: Well, children under eight normally eat what their parents give them. And if their parents are foolish enough to feed their kids on a diet of Coca-Cola and lollies, well, they should lift their game, and lift it urgently.
Health experts don’t buy the Abbott argument — shared by many — that it’s the parents’ responsibility. “Absolutely not,” says professor Colagiuri. “It’s impossible for children to avoid these advertisements — the bombardment of viewers with these ads during the recent England-Australia cricket series was outrageous — parents would have had to sit with their children the whole time with remote control poised to ensure that their children were not exposed.
“It’s tough for parents to constantly resist children’s pestering for unhealthy food and they need to be supported,” says the Obesity Policy Coalition’s Martin. “Endorsements by sporting heroes fuel children’s pestering, and make it much harder for parents. Junk-food companies and sporting bodies need to take some responsibility, and not pin it all on parents.
“The truth is that our children are being ruthlessly exposed to junk-food marketing,” says Michael Moore, of the Public Health Association of Australia, which also wants a ban on junk-food companies advertising to children and sponsoring kids’ sports. “Junk food marketing … is contributing to a situation where, for the first time, we are facing the distinct possibility that this generation of children will live shorter lives than their parents. The Australian government must act now to prevent such a tragic and avoidable outcome for our kids.”
But what might be the health and financial benefits of a ban? The short answer is that it could save the taxpayer hundreds of millions or even billions of dollars in medical bills and health spending, provided it reduces the incidence of obesity.
“Clearly obesity is multifactorial and multisectoral,” says professor Colagiuri, “But such a ban would send a clear message that we are now serious about addressing the problem. Reduction in smoking involved many interventions over many years and the same will be necessary to combat the obesity epidemic. An advertising ban would be one of many steps and strategies.
“Restricting sports sponsorship and junk-food advertising, would help break the connection between junk food and sports that food companies have created,” says Martin. “This would be likely to have substantial impact on overweight and obesity rates over time, as part of a package of measures to address the obesity problem.”
Nine years ago, the UK’s Food Standards Authority published a horrifying report about the epidemic of childhood obesity in the UK. Shortly afterwards, the respected medical journal, The Lancet, called for a ban on sports stars advertising junk food. Almost a decade later, Britain is seeing more of it than ever.
The same will happen here unless action is taken. So how to make it happen? The Cancer Council’s Kathy Chapman urges people to lodge complaints through Junkbusters “so we can collectively have a louder voice on this issue”.
If “big junk-food” has the money, we should ensure that everyone benefits from it.
In this state, (NSW), all clubs must pay a tithe to their community.
The fact that poker machine taxes and smoking bans have killed all but the largest clubs,and the smaller ones have aligned themselves with the larger ones to avoid going under is an unfortunate by-product of this tithe is relevant but none the less a fact. (I might also add that pubs do not have the same enforced social responsibility that clubs have and this is a disgrace that should be fixed quickly).
Penrith Rugby League Club has just released its balance sheet for the year. The 12 aligned clubs that make up the total of this conglomerate were forced to hand over 125million in taxes to the communities that these clubs serve.
Why not a super profits tax on fast food, or a tithe on their advertising budgets?
In its simplest form, a community swimming pool for each half hour of ads.Or a school gym for exclusive rights to a site? You could include the arts and direct funds raised through the tax to the preservation of or maintenance of or building of community halls, theatres and public meeting venues.
You could tie in a FFO`s, (Fast Food Outlet), responsibilities to the geographical area it profits from. This would appease the “anties”, provide the necessary funding for sport and recreation in trouble spots and rural spots and let the government and the community steer a positive message from what is considered an evil empire at the moment.
The use of club provided community buses by children groups, and senior citizens groups has helped de-demonise clubs in communities,this just may help de-demonise FFO`s.
Just a thought.
We should get to the root of the problem and ban these nasty “foods” rather than the advertising of them. That way, weak and feckless parents won’t be able to buy them for their children – they’ll have to poison them with their own cooking.
I really think you can’t have too much regulation where public health or safety issues are involved. People clearly can’t be trusted to manage themselves. But why stop there? For example car advertisements that involve images indicating speed are banned and people still speed on the roads. Clearly the only viable alternative is to ban cars that travel above the speed limit.
All the complexities of modern life could be resolved if only there was a great big book of rules to tell us what to do in every circumstance (well, them – those others… I don’t need it) accompanied by an appropriate compliance regime. That would make everything alright, wouldn’t it?
And the series started so well…
How dare anyone suggest Maccas sets out to target kids while they are forming their eating habits and starting to play a game they see their heroes on TV play.
There must be some other reason the (now Ronny-free) McDonnys only sponsor the Greater Brisbane Junior Rugby League competitions from under 7 to under 10, but not under 11 to under 18.
No doubt the BJRL will say it is because the youngsters only start playing for competition points at under 11 or somesuch nonsense (hell, they might even believe that is why Maccas agreed to this deal).
You would have to be a hamburger clown to buy that line (and the appalling garbage these fat/sugar peddlers sell).
The BJRL is either the largest junior league in the country, or pretty close to it. They have Macca branding all over their website, thank them as Primary Sponsors and all the competitions from under 7 to under 10 are called the “Maccas Under 9s” etc.
I am glad my sons graduated from the BJRL before these gastronomic and environmental vandals infected it with their special sauce, or I would have had to stop them playing on ethical grounds.
The off-field behaviour of many of the employees of the BJRL’s other primary sponsor is almost as distasteful.
The horrible images of Brisbane Broncos “legend” Allan Langer drunkenly dancing on a bar table in his under grundies and that latter-day bastion of virtue Darren Lockyer engaging in a drunken push and shove in a street a few years ago remain indelibly and unfortunately etched into my consciousness.
I’m a bit conflicted by this article. My youngest was in Little Athletics for years which is sponsored by McDs. The Little Aths people would give out discount vouchers on occasions and big Ron himself would sometimes show up for particular events. I never had a problem with this because we viewed fast food as a treat not a regular occurence so a feed of Macs every once in a while isn’t going to hurt. My kids are all lean mean fighting machines so my initial response is “What’s all the hoo-hah about?” That being said I do not like fast food advertising in general during kids shows because it does get into the kids minds & they will pester their parents into buying the stuff. In some households I can see it becoming a habit that could rapidly become out of control. Banning sport advertising in general however is a bit over the top. I think that more effort should be put into the Jamie Oliver approach whichteaches people that healthy food can be cheap & taste good & easy to prepare.
I note that while you reported on the Government and the Coalition’s policy positions on junk food advertising and sponsorship, people might be interested to know The Greens position.
Their policy is to ban junk food advertising during children’s TV and have a bill before the Parliament that attempts to do so. They refer to the same model of legislation, educaiton and replacement funding that was so successful with replacing tobacco sponsorship.
They also secured an alcohol-sponsorship replacement package for sporting clubs as part of their support for the Alcopops legislation. While committing $25m to the package (not enough, but a start) the government have sat on their hands since, and only recently released a discussion paper on the topic. Its not like community consultation is needed to work out how to deliver the package…