jennifereccles I do hope you never develop any medical condition or need any medication that results in your having to ‘eat a bit less’ to maintain your ideal body weight. You might find out just how difficult that can be.
Anja I’ve read your link, it was interesting. But like many articles in the Conversation these days, I think it’s perhaps an oversimplification.
I don’t doubt that that if you’re on a low income, your food choices are going to be limited and given what’s on offer in the supermarkets, you’re likely to choose calorie-dense, nutrient-low foods because they’re cheap and don’t need much cooking.
But that can’t be the whole picture, can it? I think if you look at photographs of school children in the 20’s and 30’s, when there was much more poverty and deprivation than there is now, there wasn’t any obesity then.
Why not? Because the processed food that forms a large part of many people’s diets wasn’t available then. The food manufacturers with their marketing skills and their use of chemicals to prolong shelf-life bear at least some responsibility.
And the author’s argument takes no heed of the fact that overweight, obesity, and metabolic syndrome are not by any means confined to poor people in deprived communities.
Our whole relationship with food has changed. As a child in the 50’s I was exhorted to eat things up because they were good for me. People ate to live.
Now food is largely a lifestyle choice. People virtue-signal by excluding nutritious food items because they think they are bad for them or because they think eating them is bad for the environment.
We have developed an emotional relationship to food. We no longer live to eat, we eat in some cases to reward ourselves, or in others we deny ourselves food as a form of control.
So although I accept there’s a link between poverty and obesity, I think it’s much more complicated than that.
And I think that it’s very sad that although we no longer have the type of malnutrition that existed in the 20s and 30s, it’s not been eradicated, so much as replaced by another form of it.