Our Collective Laziness Is Costing America Billions

Turns out you can put a price tag on couch potatoes

Our Collective Laziness Is Costing America Billions

Our Collective Laziness Is Costing America Billions

By Kirk Miller

The real price of your laziness isn’t “having those extra 30 minutes in the morning.”

It’s $67.5 billion.

That’s according to scientific journal The Lancet, which just published a study that quantified how inactivity is damaging the world economy.

To come up with the “costs,” the study examined expenses, productivity losses and disability-adjusted life-years for five diseases related to inactivity: coronary heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, stroke, breast cancer and colon cancer.

In turn, these numbers were divvied up by effects on the public via lost tax revenues, productivity losses, health insurance and out-of-pocket/household costs. It was also dissected by region — and yes, the U.S. of A was the worst offender, accounting for more than 40% of the final total, or about $28 billion.

For the study, inactivity was defined using the World Health Organization’s definition as a person not meeting the recommended 150 minutes of “moderate-intensity physical activity per week” for adults.

The bad news, as Bloomberg noted, is that using different methods, researchers estimate the costs might be 2-3 times higher.

Good news? We all just need to do a tiny bit more. According to the study, “If inactivity were not eliminated, but decreased instead by 10% or 25%, more than 533,000 [or] more than 1-3 million deaths, respectively, could be averted every year.”

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