Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Is capitalism making us fat?
Is capitalism making us fat?
Jan 12, 2026 8:44 PM

As workers emerge from the holidays an average of one pound heavier, weight loss tops every list of New Year’s resolutions. Yet in 2019, physicians are asking politicians to classify obesity as a disease to be treated by taxing sugary foods – and mentators are blaming our penchant for overindulgence on the capitalist system.

If obesity is a disease, then in the West it is an epidemic. Some 40 percent of Americans and 30 percent of adults in the UK are obese. The familiar litany of conditions associated with being overweight includes heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and high blood pressure. The Royal College of Physicians has asked that obesity be labeled a disease, rather than a behavioral choice because, as RCP President Andrew Goddard said, such a label “reduces the stigma of having obesity.” Critics respond that, while some people may have a genetic predisposition to retain weight, obesity is caused by consuming more calories than we burn; consuming fewer calories of any kind, even exclusively at McDonald’s, will lead to weight loss.

Others have tried to blame spreading waistlines on market expansion. Jonathan C. Wells wrote in the peer-reviewed American Journal of Human Biology that the key to understanding obesity is an “obesogenic niche” caused by the “unifying logic of capitalism.” Historically, “capitalism contributed to the under-nutrition of many populations through demand for cheap labor.” Yet as global financial needs “switched to consumption, capitalism has increasingly driven consumer behavior inducing widespread over-nutrition.”

Furthermore, the free market actually restrictsour choices, “both at the behavioral level, through advertising, price manipulations and restriction of choice, and at the physiological level through the enhancement of addictive properties of foods” (namely, the addition of sugar and fat).

If the scientific justification seems novel, the underlying ideas are not. “An expanding Late Capitalist world requires that no one ever be fully satisfied,” wrote Hillel Schwartz in his 1986 book Never Satisfied: A Cultural History of Diets, Fantasies, and Fat. Hence, “fat people” are “victims of the double binds of capitalism, which are sexist, racist and class-biased.”

These arguments have filtered down into popular websites, sometimes questioning the ethics of the economic system itself. “If capitalism is a virtue, fat people are saintly,” wrote Tina Dupuy at The Huffington Post.

To blame the free market for gluttony, one of the deadly sins, would undermine its moral legitimacy. But these arguments are a lot to swallow.

Experts believe the impetus to es from ancient, primal cravings dating back to our days as hunter-gatherers. It made sense for a species uncertain of where it would find its next meal to store as many calories as possible. Happily, those conditions no longer hold, but our psychological programming has never adapted.

Free enterprise has contributed to obesity only insofar as it has produced such abundance as to nearly vanquish malnutrition. “The biggest unreported story in the past three quarters of a century,” said Blake Hurst, president of the Missouri Farm Bureau, is the “increase in availability of food for mon person.” The average food supply per person, per day, has risen by 600 calories since 1961. Global dietary supply adequacy has risen in an almost unbroken climb for two decades. Only collectivist governments and war-torn regions resist this global progress. For instance, the average Venezuelan lost 24 pounds in a single year in mentators have dubbed “the Maduro diet.”

The world’s unprecedented food supply may coexist uneasily with our caveman-era cravings. But to facetiously blame their existence on capitalism serves only to exacerbate what Theodore Dalrymple called “dishonest fatalism” – the mindset that blames self-destructive choices on external factors beyond our control – and to invent new bogeymen for a crusading activist government.

It also overlooks the ways government interventionism has led to perverse incentives. A national health care system like the NHS discourages personal responsibility by externalizing the costs of health conditions associated with obesity. Taxpayers, rather than individuals making regrettable dietary choices, foot the bill in a system that is “free at the point of delivery.”

Without a way to treat good actors differently from bad actors – by forcing the latter to bear the economic, as well as physical, costs of their decisions – such nations turn to paternalistic government solutions. Public health activists lobby for new taxes on soda, sugary desserts, even red meat. But such blunt instruments cannot discriminate between the noble poor seeking a rare treat and the glutton and end up merely punishing the less prosperous.

Some believe even these nanny state measures do not go far enough. “Above all, we have to recognise that this danger has social roots which require social responses, the deeply held belief of social democrats and socialists for generations,” wrote Will Hutton in a Guardian article titled “Fat is a Capitalist Issue.”

Ultimately, obesity must be fought by eliminating the vice of gluttony, a passion that cannot be removed by the tax code. But the ancients offered a solution. St. John Cassian wrote that “we must trample under foot gluttonous desires … not only by fasting,” but by cultivating such a love of spiritual things that the believer sees eating “not so much a concession to pleasure, as a burden.”

Until such time as that occurs, the public sphere can encourage people to accept personal responsibility for, and bear the consequences of, their health and lifestyle decisions. “Liberty not only means that the individual has both the opportunity and the burden of choice; it also means that he must bear the consequences of his actions and will receive praise or blame for them,” wrote F.A. Hayek in The Constitution of Liberty. “Liberty and responsibility are inseparable.”

Air Force photo by senior airman Jarrod Grammel. This photo has been cropped. Public domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
GodblogCon 2007 Day 1
Today was a pretty full day that just wrapped up a few minutes ago. Al Mohler, president of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville, KY, opened up the day with a keynote address, “Pioneering the New Media for Christ.” Mohler emphasized municative mandate of the Christian faith: “To be a Christian is to bear the responsibility municate.” Setting this statement within the context of stewardship, Mohler emphasized the biblical foundations for a Christian view munication. In creation God made...
The Few, The Proud, The Marines
U.S.M.C. War Memorial Last summer I visited the National Museum of the Marine Corps in Quantico, Virginia. It is an impressive and moving tribute to the U.S. Marines, focusing especially on WWII to the present War on Terror. There was an even a section which chronicled the transformation of young recruits to Marines who embody the virtues of “honor, courage, mitment.” David Zucchino of the Los Angeles Times has written a piece titled, “From Boys to Marines.” The article is...
Misguided Hop Hip Protests: Media Companies Aren’t The Problem
The New York Times reports of a well-intentioned protest by a pastor to protest the ridiculous and dehumanizing lyrics of the type of hip hop shown on networks like BET and MTV. Wearing white T-shirts with red stop signs and chanting “BET does not reflect me, MTV does not reflect me,” protesters have been gathering every Saturday outside the homes of executives in Washington and New York City. The orderly, mostly black crowds are protesting music videos that they say...
Global Warming Consensus Alert: Coal is Universal!
When you think about it, NBC’s little promotional stunt on Sunday Night Football for their “Green is Universal” week is a lot like a mini-Kyoto treaty: it was an empty gesture that had no long-term impact on the problem it was trying to address, while immediately making things worse on their broadcast, and in the end the only thing it plished was to make the participants feel a bit better about themselves. They probably shouldn’t though, considering that in order...
Film Screening: ‘The Kite Runner’
GodblogCon 2007 hasn’t quite started yet, but one of the privileges of attendance at this year’s conference was an opportunity to see an early screening of “The Kite Runner,” (courtesy Grace Hill Media) directed by Marc Forster (who has also directed “Stranger than Fiction” and “Finding Neverland”). The film is based on the best-selling novel by Khaled Hosseini. Michael Medved helped to host the event late last night, introducing the film and as a special treat leading a Q&A session...
The Greatness of America
Here is a fantastic quote about America that deserves a hearing: From the very beginning, the American dream meant proving to all mankind that freedom, justice, human rights and democracy were no utopia but were rather the most realistic policy there is and the most likely to improve the fate of each and every person. America did not tell the millions of men and women who came from every country in the world and who–with their hands, their intelligence and...
New Blog of Note: The Immanent Frame
A new blog has been added to our blogroll sidebar (along with a much-needed round of housecleaning on old and out-of-date links). Announcement below: The Social Science Research Council is pleased to announce the launch of The Immanent Frame, a new SSRC blog on secularism, religion, and the public sphere. The blog is opening with a series of posts on Charles Taylor’s A Secular Age, including recent contributions from Robert Bellah, Wendy Brown, Jose Casanova, Elizabeth Shakman Hurd, and Colin...
‘The New Fellow Travelers’
In the Washington Post, Anne Applebaum takes a look at Hugo Chavez, president of Venezuela, and his worshipful celebrity fans in the United States. Here’s the key paragraph from her column, The New Fellow Travelers: In fact, for the malcontents of Hollywood, academia and the catwalks, Chávez is an ideal ally. Just as the sympathetic foreigners whom Lenin called “useful idiots” once supported Russia abroad, their modern equivalents provide the Venezuelan president with legitimacy, attention and good photographs. He, in...
GodblogCon Radio Roundtable
On Hugh Hewitt’s radio show yesterday, he hosted a roundtable discussion with folks at this year’s GodblogCon (link here). After Hugh interviews Mark Steyn, Hugh has Michael Medved, Al Mohler, John Mark Reynolds, and Mark D. Roberts to discuss the conference and the significance of new media for Christian cultural engagement. ...
Harry Reid, Fiscal Conservative
Sophisticated followers of politics such as the readers of PowerBlog will not be surprised by this story, but I’ll bring it to your attention anyway. The US House recently passed a bill that includes a dramatic tax increase on mining businesses. Supporters argue that the tax helps reign in the environmentally abusive mining industry. Higher taxes. Environmental concern. Senate Democrats would be scrambling to get on that bus, right? One problem: Majority Leader Harry Reid is from Nevada, whose economy...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved