The Navajo Nation will soon have the country's first-ever junk-food tax (2024)

The Navajo Nation will soon have the country's first-ever junk-food tax (1)

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A version of this piece was originally published by Civil Eats.

The Navajo Nation will soon have the country's first-ever junk-food tax (2)

Next month, after three years of legislative tug-of-war, the Navajo Nation will become the first place in the United States to impose a tax on junk food. The Healthy Dine? Nation Act of 2014, signed into law by Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly last November, mandates a 2 percent sales tax on pastries, chips, soda, desserts, fried foods, sweetened beverages, and other products with “minimal-to-no-nutritional value” sold within the borders of the nation’s largest reservation.

Authored by the Diné Community Advocacy Alliance (DCAA), a grassroots organization of community volunteers, the legislation was modeled on existing taxes on tobacco and alcohol, as well as other fat and sugar tax initiatives outside the United States. The act follows on the heels of a spring 2014 amendment that removed a 5 percent tribal sales tax on fresh fruits and vegetables.

The sales tax will generate an estimated $1 million a year in 110 tribal chapters for wellness projects—greenhouses, food processing and storage facilities, traditional foods cooking classes, community gardens, farmers’ markets, and more.

There are just 10 full-service grocery stores on the entire Navajo reservation, a territory about the size of West Virginia.

Those who advocate for a return to a more traditional diet hail the law as a positive change: The Navajo Nation, a 27,000-square-mile area that straddles three states, has a 42 percent unemployment rate. Nearly half of those over the age of 25 live under the federal poverty line. The USDA has identified nearly all of the Navajo Nation as a food desert, meaning heavily processed foods are more available than fresh produce and fruit.

According to a 2014 report from the Diné Policy Institute there are just 10 full-service grocery stores on the entire Navajo reservation, a territory about the size of West Virginia that straddles parts of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. As a result, many people rely on food stamps to stretch grocery dollars with the inexpensive processed, fried, and sugary foods commonly found in gas stations or convenience stores.

But even having a grocery store nearby doesn’t guarantee access to healthy food. A DCAA survey of one major grocer in the town of Kayenta found approximately 80 percent of the store’s inventory qualified, in the group’s definition, as junk food. Compounding the issue is the continued popularity at family gatherings, flea-markets, and ceremonial gatherings of lard-drenched frybread—whose dubious origins have been traced back to the “Long Walk,” the federal government’s forced removal of Navajos to a military fort in New Mexico 300 miles away from ancestral land in Arizona.

The heavy consumption of soda, fat, and processed foods has taken its toll. According to the Indian Health Service, an estimated 25,000 of the Navajo Nation’s 300,000 members have type-2 diabetes and another 75,000 are pre-diabetic. The tribe has some of the worst health outcomes in the United States, with rampant hypertension and cardiovascular disease. According to data collected between 1999 and 2009 by the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) overall death rates for American Indians and Alaska Natives were nearly 50 percent greater than those of non-Hispanic whites.

These stark health statistics drove the DCAA to lobby for a consumer tax—despite strong opposition at the start from Shelly and some council delegates. Navajo Nation Council Delegate Jonathan Nez was a co-sponsor of the Healthy Diné Nation Act. He says there was “overwhelming support” for the initiative in his region, a large rural area on the Utah and Arizona border, but he did hear misgivings amongst the general population and some of the other delegates.

Overall death rates for American Indians and Alaska Natives are nearly 50 percent greater than those of non-Hispanic whites.

“Some people thought: ‘A two-percent sales tax is going to hit my wallet,'” says Nez. The legislation was vetoed three times by Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly, because of questions about how the tax would be regulated. He also cited concerns about how the tax would be enacted along with its potential impact on small business owners. Other opponents said the bill would place undue burden on consumers and drive desperately needed revenue off the reservation and into surrounding cities. After multiple revisions, the tax gained support from a majority of the council, with the added concession of a 2020 expiration date.

While this is the first “junk-food tax” in the United States, the movement to slow the consumption of unhealthy foods gained momentum last November after residents of Berkeley, California voted to tax soda and other sweetened beverages. (And there was a failed attempt back in 1992 to add a tax to snack foods, candy, and bottled water in California.) According to the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity, which supports a national sugar-sweetened Beverage (SSB) Tax, studies show a correlation between added excise taxes and lower consumption rates. One 2011 study published in Preventive Medicine showed that a penny-per-ounce tax on sugar-sweetened beverages nationally could generate nearly $16billion a year in revenue between 2010 and 2015 while cutting consumption by 24 percent.

It’s still too soon to evaluate the tax’s effect on consumption habits in the Navajo Nation, but Nez says it has already opened a discussion “about how to take better care of yourself, how to return back to the way we used to live, with fresh produce, vegetables, and fruit along with our own traditional unprocessed foods.”

Denisa Livingston, a community health advocate with the DCAA, has been leading grocery store tours in Window Rock, Arizona to educate government officials and community members about how the layout and inventory of local markets affects buying patterns. “I’ve been telling the councils, food can either empower us and make us strong, or it can kill us,” she says. “Healthy food is not just our tradition, it’s our identity. This is the start of a return to food sovereignty.”

The Navajo Nation will soon have the country's first-ever junk-food tax (2024)

FAQs

The Navajo Nation will soon have the country's first-ever junk-food tax? ›

Nation Act of 2014, signed into law by Navajo Nation President Ben Shelly last November, mandates a 2 percent sales tax on pastries, chips, soda, desserts, fried foods, sweetened beverages, and other products with “minimal-to-no-nutritional value” sold within the borders of the nation's largest reservation.

What is the unhealthy food tax on the Navajo Nation? ›

Context: The Healthy Diné Nation Act (HDNA) of 2014 included a 2% tax on foods of little-to-no-nutritious value (“junk foods”) on the Navajo Nation. The law was the first ever in the United States and any Indigenous nation worldwide with a population at a high risk for common nutrition-related conditions.

Should the government raise taxes on junk food? ›

If a junk food tax ever sees the light of day, it's a safe bet it will have the desired effect (decreasing obesity, heart disease, diabetes and other diseases) only if it's implemented in conjunction with public education programs and other measures.

What is Navajo Nation sales tax? ›

The Navajo Sales Tax went into effect on April 1, 2002. On July 1, 2018, the tax rate increased from 5% to 6%. The tax returns and payments are due on a quarterly basis (on May 15th, August 15th, November 15th and February 15th).

What is the food insecurity in the Navajo Nation? ›

Within the Navajo Nation, the food insecurity rate is 76.7%, which is the highest reported rate in the United States due to structural challenges, high unemployment, geographic barriers, and the limited varieties and quantities of fruits and vegetables along with difficulty to access food due to high poverty rates.

Do Navajo have to pay taxes? ›

Do Indian people pay taxes? Individual American Indians and Alaskan Natives and their businesses pay federal income taxes just like every other American. The one exception is when an Indian person receives income directly from a treaty or trust resource such as fish or timber: that income is not federally taxed.

What is the tax on unhealthy food? ›

Snack taxes are generally applied to unhealthy products high in sugar and fat. Adding an excise tax (a fee per ounce) or a sales tax (a percentage of the product's price) to unhealthy products increases the price of unhealthy snacks for consumers.

Why should junk food be illegal? ›

In the age of instant gratification, everyone wants fast food. But these foods are often highly processed and contain harmful preservatives and additives. Excessive junk food consumption contributes to obesity, which has become a significant health issue for children worldwide.

How would taxing junk food affect the economy? ›

Economic theory says that by raising the relative price of unhealthy foods that contribute to obesity, the tax would motivate people to spend more of their income on foods that are healthy. As consumers abandon costlier junk foods, obesity rates would fall, and so would health care costs. At least that's the theory.

What countries tax junk food? ›

Only Hungary and Mexico have junk food taxes so far

Sugary drinks were a natural starting place to experiment with government intervention in the food environment since there's a lot of evidence linking sugary beverages to diet-related disease, and soda is an easily modifiable part of the diet.

Can you own property in Navajo Nation? ›

Generally, lands within the Nation are held in trust by the United States for the Navajo Nation as a collective entity. Individual Navajos may possess interests in such lands, through customary use, or through modern interests such as homesite leases, business site leases, or land use permits.

What is the tax rate for Navajo County? ›

What is the sales tax rate in Navajo County? The minimum combined 2024 sales tax rate for Navajo County, Arizona is 6.43%. This is the total of state and county sales tax rates. The Arizona state sales tax rate is currently 5.6%.

Do natives not pay sales tax? ›

All Indians are subject to federal income taxes. As sovereign entities, tribal governments have the power to levy taxes on reservation lands. Some tribes do and some don't. As a result, Indians and non-Indians may or may not pay sales taxes on goods and services purchased on the reservation depending on the tribe.

Is the Navajo Nation in poverty? ›

Within the Navajo Nation, 35.8% of households have incomes below the federal poverty threshold. This is in comparison to 12.7% of all households nationally.

How do the Navajo get food? ›

Traditionally, the Navajo farmed vegetables, including beans, squash, and corn, which grew in many colors and was eaten dried (and ground) or fresh. The Navajo hunted deer and other small mammals for protein. Today sheep are raised in the territory for wool, and mutton is one of the tribe's most popular food sources.

Can navajos eat pork? ›

The Navajo of today claim that their dislike of pork and bacon dates from Bosque Redondo days when so many people fell ill from eating poorly cooked pork. This is a rationalization for their abhorrence, however, because as early as 1855 Davis observed that they loathed hogs. The Navajo are very fond of goat meat.

What is the gross receipts tax on the Navajo Nation? ›

Currently, there is a 4% sales tax imposed on products and services procured on the Navajo Nation. In New Mexico, Gross Receipts Tax (GT) is imposed on taxable gross receipts (GR) as sales tax. For example, in 2011, there was a Gross Receipts total of $3,047,696,578 for Farmington, NM.

What is the obesity rate in the Navajo Nation? ›

Recent studies have documented particularly high obesity rates among American Indian children living in the Southwest, with one study indicating 47% of children were overweight and 28% were obese in the region that includes the Navajo Nation.

What is the Healthy Dine Act Navajo Nation? ›

To promote the health of the Navajo people, the Navajo Nation passed the Healthy Diné Nation Act (HDNA) in 2014. The HDNA included a 2% tax on “minimal-to-no-nutritional-value” foods and waived 5% sales tax on healthy foods, the first such policy in the United States and any sovereign Tribal nation.

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