close
MENU
3 mins to read

Budget 2016: No sweet taxes this year

OPINION: Jamie Oliver has publically lobbied the UK government and was quick to claim credit when it introduced a two-tier levy on soft drinks from 2018. With special feature audio.

Pam Newlove
Tue, 03 May 2016

Who would have thought celebrity chefs could influence governments to introduce new taxes? Jamie Oliver has publically lobbied the UK government to do this and was quick to claim credit when it introduced a two-tier levy on soft drinks from 2018.  Unsurprisingly, Mr Oliver quickly identified

Want to read more? It's easy.

Choose your best value subscription option

Student

Exclusive offer for uni students studying at a New Zealand university (valued at $499).
Individual
Group membership
NBR Marketplace

Yearly Premium Online Subscription

NZ$499.00 / yearly

NZ$399.00 / yearly

Offer ends July 31st

Monthly Premium Online Subscription

NZ$44.95 / monthly

Smartphone Only Subscription

NZ$24.95 / monthly

Premium Group Membership 10 Users

NZ$350+GST / monthly

$35 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Premium Group Membership 20 Users

NZ$600+GST / monthly

$30 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Premium Group Membership 50 Users

NZ$1250+GST / monthly

$25 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Premium Group Membership 100 Users

NZ$1875+GST / monthly

$18.75 per user - Pay by monthly credit card debit

Yearly Premium Online Subscription + NBR Marketplace

NZ$499.00 / yearly

Already have an account? Login
Pam Newlove
Tue, 03 May 2016
© All content copyright NBR. Do not reproduce in any form without permission, even if you have a paid subscription.
Budget 2016: No sweet taxes this year
57797
true