From CBSNews.com:
 
The Senate Finance Committee today is  hearing proposals on how to pay for President Obama's proposed universal  health care plan, which is expected to cost more than $1 trillion. Among  the proposals, as Consumer Affairs reports: A three-cent tax on sodas  as well as other sugary drinks, including energy and sports drinks like  Gatorade. Diet sodas would be exempt.
"While many factors promote weight  gain, soft drinks are the only food or beverage that has been shown  to increase the risk of overweight and obesity, which, in turn, increase  the risk of diabetes, stroke, and many other health problems,"  Michael Jacobson of the Center for Science in the Public Interest, which  is pushing the idea, said in his testimony. "Soft drinks are nutritionally  worthless…[and] are directly related to weight gain, partly because  beverages are more conducive to weight gain than solid foods."
 
According to Jacobson, "Beverage  companies market more than 14 billion gallons of calorie-laden soft  drinks annually. That is equivalent to about 506 12-oz. servings per  year, or 1.4 servings per day, for every man, woman, and child."
 
He argued that each penny of tax on a  12-ounce drink would raise $1.5 billion annually and lower consumption  roughly one percent, improving overall health. The Congressional Budget  Office estimates that a three-cent tax would generate $24 billion over  the next four years.
Such a tax might well be considered a  "sin tax" similar to the taxes levied on cigarettes, which  are extremely high compared to most other consumer products. Jacobson  also wants the taxes on alcohol raised -- he argues that doing so will  "compensate society for the costs of alcohol abuse and alcoholism  and to marginally reduce problem drinking." The argument echoes  the idea of cigarette taxes helping pay for health care costs associated  with smoking.
In his testimony, Jacobson also called  for a ban on artificial trans fat and a reduction in sodium levels in  food.
Any soda tax a proposal is unlikely to  pass easily, as New York Governor David Paterson well knows. Paterson's  proposed 18-percent tax on soft drinks died amid pressure from the industry  and resistance among New Yorkers who didn't want to pay more for soda.
 
It would also, it should be noted, only  pay for a tiny portion of the health care overhaul.
 
Susan Neely of the American Beverage  Association, which represents Coca-Cola Co., PepsiCo Inc. and others,  told the Wall Street Journal that the tax would hit poor Americans hardest  and would not lower consumption.
"Taxes are not going to teach our children how to have a healthy lifestyle," she said. Neely said the industry backs programs to lower consumption of sugary drinks in schools.
