Mexico: Schools to implement govt sponsored ban on junk food; violation fine upto USD 5,450
According to the UN Children's Fund report, children in Mexico have the highest consumption of junk food leading to obesity.
Press Trust of India | October 22, 2024 | 12:20 PM IST
MEXICO: Schools in Mexico will have six months to implement a government-sponsored ban on junk food or else face heavy fines, officials said Monday. The rules, published on September 30, target products that have become staples for two or three generations of Mexican schoolkids: sugary fruit drinks sold in triangular cardboard cartons, chips, artificial pork rinds and soy-encased, salty peanuts with chile.
School administrators who violate the order will face fines equivalent to between USD 545 and USD 5,450, which could double for a second offense, amounting to nearly a year's wages for some of them. Mexico's children have the highest consumption of junk food in Latin America and many get 40 per cent of their total caloric intake from it, according to the UN Children's Fund which labelled child obesity there an emergency.
The new ban targets products that have become staples for two or three generations of Mexican schoolkids: sugary fruit drinks sold in triangular cardboard cartons, chips, artificial pork rinds and soy-encased, salty peanuts with chile. Previous attempts to implement laws against so-called junk food' have met with little success. President Claudia Sheinbaum said Monday schools would have to offer water fountains and alternative snacks, like bean tacos.
“It is much better to eat a bean taco than a bag of potato chips,” Sheinbaum said. “It is much better to drink hibiscus flower water than soda.” However, the vast majority of Mexico's 255,000 schools nationwide do not have free drinking water available to students. According to a report in 2020, the effort to install drinking fountains succeeded in only about 10,900 of the country's schools, or about 4 per cent of them.
Many schools are located in areas so poor or remote that they struggle to maintain acceptable bathrooms, internet connection or electricity. Also the most common recipes for beans, refried beans, usually contain a significant dose of lard, which would violate rules against saturated fats. Mexico instituted front-of-package warning labels for foods between 2010 and 2020, to advise consumers about high levels of salt, added sugar, excess calories and saturated fats. Some snack foods carry all four of the black, octagonal warning labels.
But under the new rules, schools will have to phase out any product containing even a single warning label from school snack stands. It wasn't immediately clear how the government would enforce the ban on the sidewalks outside schools, where vendors usually set up tables of goods to sell to kids at recess. Mexican authorities say the country has the worst childhood obesity problem in the world, with about one-third of children overweight or obese. (AP) GSP
Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..
To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.
Next Story
]Railway Board: Two stream options available for officer's recruitment through CSE since 2022
After a change in the recruitment pattern of officers in 2019, two batches were already recruited in 2022 and 2023 and the third batch is in the recruitment process through the CSE in 2024.
Press Trust of IndiaFeatured News
]- Maharashtra Election 2024: State’s job scheme stumbles; just 21% apprentice placements in private firms
- ‘First-of-its-kind’: IIT Madras, IIM Udaipur, IIIT Nagpur hostels to be built in PPP-mode
- IIM Calcutta, Delhi, XLRI: How management schools are planning new ways to improve NIRF ranking in research
- Study Abroad: India beats China in race for US education, leads with 3.31 lakh students, says report
- Delhi University students, teachers demand removal of principal accused of slapping Dalit student
- These MBA specialisations are seeing a surge in demand, jobs
- Education News This Week: Fake news on CBSE exams; UPPSC protests, crackdown on coaching ads
- CAT 2024 and a day on campus: How Nirma University plans MBA admissions
- NEET PG Counselling: Telangana’s domicile rules leave hundreds with ‘nowhere to go’; over 70 move court
- MBA courses in healthcare management, hospital administration growing popular