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Do super-sized supermarkets cause obesity?

By Alan Davies - posted Wednesday, 16 September 2015


A study of eight countries concludes there's a strong correlation between obesity and the size of supermarkets. The authors suggest large supermarkets emphasise quantity over quality.

 

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National obesity prevalence (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2) and average supermarket store size (aisle length in metres) in eight countries

Here's an interesting study that finds an extraordinarily strong correlation (r=0.96) between national obesity levels and the size of supermarkets in eight countries with western-style diets i.e. Netherlands, Sweden, Denmark, Canada, England, Australia, New Zealand and the United States.

The paper is titled The correlation between supermarket size and national obesity prevalence and it was written by Adrian Cameron, Wilma Waterlander and Chalida Svastisalee.

The researchers took national-level obesity data from the UK National Obesity Observatory. The size of supermarkets was inferred from the total length of aisle in a sample of 170 supermarkets across the eight countries.

The authors say their finding suggests that "either the large supermarkets themselves, or an aspect of the urban environment or food/shopping culture that encourages such stores, is particularly obesogenic".

They propose a possible narrative:

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Explanations for the association between store size and national obesity prevalence may include larger and less frequent shopping trips and greater choice and exposure to foods in countries with larger stores.

Large supermarkets may represent a food system that focuses on quantity ahead of quality and therefore may be an important and novel environmental indicator of a pattern of behaviour that encourages obesity.

I looked at data available at the UK National Obesity Observatory. It shows the age-standardised national average BMIs for the three lowest-scoring countries in the exhibit range from 19.3 to 20.3. Those for the other countries range from 28 to 33.5 (the US, of course, is highest).

That's a huge difference; is it possible it could be explained wholly or in large part by national differences in the average size of supermarkets?

I'd be very cautious about generalising a finding as particular as supermarket size on the basis of a sample of just eight countries. Moreover, it compares three northern European countries (two of them Scandinavian) against five Anglophone countries (four of them "new world" nations).

I don't have a problem with using aisle length as an indicator of size but the size of the sample is small – only eight supermarkets in England.

Leaving those reservations aside, Obesity Observatory data confirms that the Anglophone countries and a few middle east oil states stand clear at the top of the BMI tree for wealthy countries.

It also confirms Scandinavian countries are close to the bottom end (although Japan is the stand-out with an astonishing 3.3); importantly, it shows all western European countries fare much better than the English-speaking nations.

But I think supermarket size is an unlikely explanation of the differences in BMI. It's easy to find a variable that fits a distribution like national BMI – the ages of the members of my extended family would fit it quite well. Last week I referenced research that found using transit makes you short!

A better starting point is to ask why some countries – particularly the Anglophone ones – have such high BMIs compared to other developed countries.

It brings to mind other exceptional characteristics of English-speaking countries, like why they have such high infrastructure costs or why they dominate popular music.

There's a number of possible explanations. One is differences in built form. It's likely that average supermarket size is a proxy for more significant variables, like mode of transport and the density of activities.

Denser places are likely to have smaller supermarkets and greater reliance on active modes of transport than private vehicles; this might contribute to lower obesity rates through higher levels of incidental exercise.

It's far more likely though that differences between wealthy countries are primarily a product of what's eaten e.g. see here, here and here. They might arise as a consequence of factors like variations in the way food is taxed, in racial and ethnic composition, in cultural aspects like diet, or in inequality (within developed countries, obesity is higher in lower socioeconomic groups).

Like the debate around infrastructure costs it's hard to pin down a single cause that explains most of the differences. One possibility advanced by these Scandinavian researchers is that "societal organisation at the macro level seems to matter". They say:

A high degree of market-liberalism has been suggested to increase the prevalence of obesity in the population. Inequality within countries seems to be positively associated with an inverse gradient between socioeconomic position (SEP) and overweight and obesity (OWOB).

They speculate that the superior performance of the Nordic countries in relation to obesity may be due to "the positive features of the Nordic welfare state", like "socially egalitarian ideals and a reputation for low levels of inequality".

Perhaps there's a parallel here in the infrastructure debate e.g. the argument that high costs in Australia are due to the modern preference for PPP financing.

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This article was first published on Crikey.



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About the Author

Dr Alan Davies is a principal of Melbourne-based economic and planning consultancy, Pollard Davies Pty Ltd (davipoll@bigpond.net.au) and is the editor of the The Urbanist blog.

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