 
090206 Ban On Fast-Food Restaurants Is Not The Answer
February 4, 2009
    (Arizona Daily Star) With all the finger-pointing at fast food as a factor 
in America's obesity epidemic, you'd think people would be fatter where the 
supply of restaurants is greater -- that is, neighborhoods teeming with burger 
joints, chicken shacks and so on.
    But according to Northwestern University finance professor David Matsa, you 
would be wrong -- and that has implications for government policy.
    Matsa, along with Michael Anderson at the University of California-Berkeley, 
this month unveiled a study, "Are Restaurants Really Supersizing America?" -- a 
nod to "Super Size Me," a 2004 documentary about a man who ate only McDonald's 
food for a month.
Matsa and Anderson acknowledge there's a well-known body of research showing 
that the frequency of eating at restaurants is correlated with greater 
accumulations of body fat. But is an abundant supply of restaurants actually 
causing fat levels to mushroom?
    To answer that, the professors measured the restaurant habits and obesity 
levels of people who live near interstate highway exits and entrances in rural 
areas. Here, in order to serve travelers, restaurant supply often greatly 
outstrips local demand.
    Matsa and Anderson compared restaurant consumers who lived zero to five 
miles from an interstate to those who lived five to 10 miles away.
    They found that people who lived right off the interstate indeed ate much 
more often at restaurants than those who lived farther away. But using a battery 
of databases, Matsa and Anderson concluded that residents of interstate towns 
were no fatter than folks who lived just a few miles away.
    For obesity data, the professors turned to an ongoing, large-scale telephone 
survey of health behavior conducted by the Centers for Disease Control.
    Matsa said the findings indicate government policies aimed at restricting 
restaurants -- a ban on new fast-food outlets in a portion of Los Angeles, for 
example -- may not work.
    People who eat more at restaurants simply may eat more generally, Matsa and 
Anderson said. If costs are added to restaurant meals through restrictions like 
putting extra taxes on fattening food or making diners drive farther to find a 
fast-food joint, restaurant patrons may simply shift to sources of cheap 
calories elsewhere, they said.
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