Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

Palm oil and dietary change: Application of an integrated macroeconomic, environmental, demographic, and health modelling framework for Thailand

Jensen, Henning Tarp; Keogh-Brown, Marcus R.; Shankar, Bhavani; Aekplakorn, Wichai; Basu, Sanjay; Cuevas, Soledad; Dangour, Alan D.; Gheewala, Shabbir H.; Green, Rosemary; Joy, Edward JM; Rojroongwasinkul, Nipa; Thaiprasert, Nalitra; Smith, Richard D.

Palm oil and dietary change: Application of an integrated macroeconomic, environmental, demographic, and health modelling framework for Thailand Thumbnail


Authors

Henning Tarp Jensen

Marcus R. Keogh-Brown

Wichai Aekplakorn

Sanjay Basu

Soledad Cuevas

Alan D. Dangour

Shabbir H. Gheewala

Rosemary Green

Edward JM Joy

Nipa Rojroongwasinkul

Nalitra Thaiprasert

Richard D. Smith



Abstract

Palm oil is a cooking oil and food ingredient in widespread use in the global food system. However, as a highly saturated fat, palm oil consumption has been associated with negative effects on cardiovascular health, while large scale oil palm production has been linked to deforestation. We construct an innovative fully integrated Macroeconomic-Environmental-Demographic-health (MED-health) model to undertake integrated health, environmental, and economic analyses of palm oil consumption and oil palm production in Thailand over the coming 20 years (2016–2035). In order to put a health and fiscal food policy perspective on policy priorities of future palm oil consumption growth, we model the implications of a 54% product-specific sales tax to achieve a halving of future energy intakes from palm cooking oil consumption. Total patient incidence and premature mortality from myocardial infarction and stroke decline by 0.03–0.16% and rural-urban equity in health and welfare improves in most regions. However, contrary to accepted wisdom, reduced oil palm production would not be environmentally beneficial in the Thailand case, since, once established, oil palms have favourable carbon sequestration characteristics compared to alternative uses of Thai cropland. The increased sales tax also provokes mixed economic impacts: While real GDP increases in a second-best Thai tax policy environment, relative consumption-to-investment price changes may reduce household welfare over extended periods unless accompanied by non-distortionary government compensation payments. Overall, our holistic approach demonstrates that product-specific fiscal food policy taxes may involve important trade-offs between nutrition, health, the economy, and the environment.

Citation

Jensen, H. T., Keogh-Brown, M. R., Shankar, B., Aekplakorn, W., Basu, S., Cuevas, S., Dangour, A. D., Gheewala, S. H., Green, R., Joy, E. J., Rojroongwasinkul, N., Thaiprasert, N., & Smith, R. D. (2019). Palm oil and dietary change: Application of an integrated macroeconomic, environmental, demographic, and health modelling framework for Thailand. Food Policy, 83, 92-103. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2018.12.003

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 16, 2018
Online Publication Date Jan 18, 2019
Publication Date Feb 1, 2019
Deposit Date Jan 23, 2019
Publicly Available Date Jan 23, 2019
Journal Food Policy
Print ISSN 0306-9192
Electronic ISSN 1873-5657
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 83
Pages 92-103
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2018.12.003
Publisher URL https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodpol.2018.12.003

Files






You might also like



Downloadable Citations