Debate Dossier
Public Health · Live Motion
Should Junk Food Be Taxed?
A live motion on whether sin taxes on food produce health gains without falling regressively on low-income households.
FormatQuick Clash / BP / PF adaptable
DifficultyEasy
Main clashHealth externality vs regressive cost
Best forPublic health, Tax incidence, Behavioral policy
The round turns on this
Does the health gain exceed the regressive cost?
Tax it
- Sugar taxes produced measurable consumption drops in Mexico and UK
- Externality pricing is the standard public-health tool
- Revenue can be earmarked for low-income health programs
Do not tax
- Sin taxes fall hardest on low-income households
- Behavioral substitution is unpredictable
- Direct subsidies of healthy alternatives are cleaner
Incidence is the round.
Argument arena · prep both sides
Pro
A junk-food tax priced to the externality and earmarked to public health is the cleanest behavioral lever the state has.
PRO 1 Externality pricing works
ClaimMexico's sugary-beverage tax cut consumption 7% in two years; UK's did similar.
WarrantReal-world natural experiments; not just modeling.
ImpactA modest tax produces measurable, durable behavior change.
Attack this
Con will say modest change has tiny health impact at population level.
PRO 2 Earmarked revenue
ClaimTax revenue can be directed to nutrition assistance and school meals.
WarrantEliminates the regressive incidence by routing the dollars back to the same households.
ImpactNet effect is progressive, not regressive.
Attack this
Con will say earmarking is rarely durable across budget cycles.
VS
Con
Junk-food taxes hit the households least able to absorb them and produce behavioral substitution the policy cannot predict.
CON 1 Regressive incidence
ClaimLow-income households spend a larger share of income on calorie-dense food.
WarrantStandard tax-incidence analysis.
ImpactThe policy reads as health and lands as a regressive tax.
Attack this
Pro will say earmarking offsets the incidence.
CON 2 Substitution is unpredictable
ClaimTaxed-product consumers substitute toward cheap alternatives, not toward healthier ones.
WarrantThe Mexican-tax data shows substitution into untaxed sugary alternatives.
ImpactYou produce the regressive cost without securing the predicted health gain.
Attack this
Pro will say broader-base taxes solve the substitution gap.
Sample round · flowed with judge notes
Pro · openingStrong open
Mexico's sugary-beverage tax cut consumption 7% in two years. The UK's did similar. Externality pricing is the standard public-health tool and it works.
JudgeStrong empirical open.
Con · responseBest turn
Low-income households spend a larger share of income on calorie-dense food. The policy reads as health and lands as a regressive tax.
JudgeClean incidence turn.
Pro · rebuttalPatches
Earmark the revenue to nutrition assistance and school meals. The same dollars return to the same households. Net incidence is progressive.
JudgePatches via earmarking.
Con · weighingBest line
Earmarking is rarely durable. Revenue gets reallocated by the next budget cycle. Pro's defense relies on a property the policy cannot guarantee.
JudgeHolds the durability point.
Judge ballot
Pro wins
Narrow margin
Reason for decision
Pro's empirical open is real and Con's durability point on earmarking is sharp. Pro narrowly wins because the substitution-mismatch argument Con extends does not show up clearly in the Mexican data.
Key clash
Whether the earmarking that offsets incidence is durable.
Pro · feedback
The earmarking-durability response is your gap. A constitutional-trust-fund mechanism would close it.
Con · feedback
Excellent incidence framing. The substitution-mismatch argument needed a sharper empirical anchor.
One drill before the rematch