The study, conducted by the
McKinsey Global Institute (MGI), said the UK's "obesity crisis" costs
almost £47bn every year.
It comes second only to the
£57bn annual toll smoking takes on the economy, it found.
"The global economic
impact of obesity is increasing," the study said
"Today obesity is
jostling with armed conflict and smoking in terms of having the greatest
human-generated global economic impact."
Estimates on the total
annual loss attributed to armed violence, war and terrorism reach £43bn.
The study blamed the
growing crisis on an inadequate response from the Government, branding its
policy on obesity as "too fragmented to be effective".
It also warned that investment
in obesity prevention was "relatively low given the scale of the
problem".
The MGI insists an urgent
"co-ordinated response" is needed from the Government, retailers,
restaurants and food and drink manufacturers to tackle the issue, recommending a
series of new measures.
They include portion
controls on fast food packaged goods, the introduction of healthy meals in
schools and workplaces and more physical education in school curriculums.
Spending on obesity
prevention programmes in the UK is less than £638m a year, the MGI says.
Skynews
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