Friday, 2 June 2017

Lardy World

2014 was a world fat point ....

Fatty World Leaders Are Not Uncommon These Days
Fatty World Leaders Are Not Uncommon These Days
 
.... It was the moment when the number of fat arses in the world reached a new high ....it was reported that global obesity rates among men went up from 3.2% in 1975 to 10.8%, while among women they rose from 6.4 % to 14.9% over that same period. 
 
The number of obese people worldwide had risen from 105 million in 1975 to 641 million in 2014. This equates to 266 million obese men and 375 million obese women in the world in 2014 and includes many male world politicians. 
 
The Cheese Arrived Just In Time To Save  The Generals From ‘Kim Fatty the Third’
The Cheese Arrived Just In Time To Save
The Generals From ‘Kim Fatty the Third’ .....

This means that there are now more adults in the world classified as obese than underweight .... a startling idea.
  • Fact: More obese men and women now live in China and the USA than in any other countries. These are also the two biggest world economies.
  • Fact: In India (which is expected to become the third biggest economy later this century), being underweight remains a significant health problem.
  • Fact: Almost a fifth of the world's obese adults live in only six high-income English-speaking countries - Australia, Canada, Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, UK, and the US ... shameful.
  • Fact: Women in the UK have the third highest BMI in Europe and by 2025 the UK is projected to have the highest levels of obese women in Europe (38%), followed by Republic of Ireland (37%) and Malta (34%).

So over 40 years we have transitioned from a world in which underweight prevalence was more than double that of obesity to essentially the opposite  ... so much perhaps for Thomas Malthus and his predictions .... at least for now.

2 comments:

  1. Shocking figures. I imagine that the environmental impact is exponential as bigger people = bigger clothes = more material = bigger transport costs and heavier people = heavier vehicles = more carburant, etc, etc.
    I've heard that the net cost to the NHS is beneficial as the obese die earlier, I'm not sure I believe that.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. They don't seem to die younger. There is a man at work who is easily 25 stone plus. He needs a stick to walk and is at or above the limit for the office chairs. A real life monster ...

      Delete

All comments are welcomed, or even just thanks if you enjoyed the post. But please make any comment relevant to the post it appears under. Off topic comments will be blocked or removed.

Moderation is on for older posts to stop spamming and comments that are off topic or inappropriate from being posted .... comments are reviewed within 48 hours. I don't block normal comments that are on topic and not inappropriate. Vexatious comments that may cause upset to other commentators, or that are attempting to espouse a particular wider political view, are reviewed before acceptance. But a certain amount of debate around a post topic is accepted, as long as it remains generally on topic and is not an attempt to become sounding board for some other cause.

Final decision on all comments is held by the blog author and is final.

Comments are always monitored for bad or abusive language, and or illegal statements i.e. overtly racist or sexist content. Spam is not tolerated and is removed.

Commentaires ne sont surveillés que pour le mauvais ou abusif langue ou déclarations illégales ie contenu ouvertement raciste ou sexiste. Spam ne est pas toléré et est éliminé.