Title: Tobacco Policy: Economic Myths and Realities
1TC Online Presentations
www.tobaccocontrol.com
2Economics of TobaccoMyths and Realities
- Kenneth E. Warner, PhD
- Avedis Donabedian Distinguished University
Professor of Public Health - University of Michigan, USA
- November 7, 2002
3Key to the myths
- TI tobacco industry myth
- TC tobacco control community myth
4Myth 1 (TI)(the industrys favorite)
- Tobacco is crucial to the economy. Without
tobacco growing, cigarette manufacturing, and
distribution and sale of tobacco products, a
states or countrys economy will suffer job
losses, falling tax revenues, and growing trade
deficits.
5When and how the myth is used
- Whenever governments consider policy that would
discourage tobacco consumptionespecially in
non-tobacco states and countries. - Intent to frighten officials into believing
that, regardless of their health benefits,
tobacco control measures would exact a huge
economic toll.
6Message
- If government adopts policy x, cigarette sales
will drop. - People will lose jobs as a consequence (tobacco
farmers, manufacturing plant employees,
wholesalers, retail clerks). - The economy will suffer from lost tax revenues,
including (where appropriate) income and sales
taxes associated with reduced spending by the
newly unemployed.
7Reality...
- A significant economic presence does not imply
significant economic dependence. - Spending on tobacco is rarely important to an
economy. - Money not spent on tobacco will be spent on
other goods and services instead, thereby
creating a comparable number of jobs.
8 - Real costs costs of transition to alternative
products. - Given the addictiveness of tobacco, the
transition necessarily occurs very slowly
(cigarette consumption declining 1-2 per year in
developed countries).
9Case studies
- In Michigan, a non-tobacco state, employment
increases as tobacco consumption declines.
Warner and Fulton, JAMA, 1994 - In the U.S., employment would rise in all 8
non-tobacco regions (44 states) if tobacco
consumption fell. Warner et al., JAMA, 1996 - Only in the 6-state tobacco bloc would employment
fall, and by a tiny fraction of state employment.
- Employment gains in Scotland, UK, South Africa,
and Bangladesh falls in Canada and Zimbabwe.
Jacobs et al., Ch. 13 in Jha and Chaloupka,
eds., Tobacco Control in Developing Countries
(Oxford, 2000)
10Principal transitional costin tobacco states and
countries
- Tobacco farmers not be thrown out of work.
-
- Rather, fewer children of tobacco farmers would
go into tobacco farming. - Schelling, Preventive Medicine, 1986
11An additional economic benefit of reduced
spending on tobacco
- Savings will accrue in health care spending, fire
fighting, equipment maintenance and cleaning, etc.
12(No Transcript)
13Myth 2 (TC)(tobacco control communitys
favorite)
- Tobacco imposes an enormous health care cost on
society. Decreasing smoking will save billions
of dollars in smoking-produced health care costs
each year.
14When and how the myth is used
- Whenever governments consider policy that would
discourage tobacco use. - Intent to convince officials that the policy
would produce major economic benefits at the same
time that it benefits the publics health.
15Reality...
- Smoking-produced illness does account for a
significant share of health care costs, e.g.,
approximately 12 in the U.S. Miller et al.,
Public Health Rep, 1998 - However, in the absence of smoking, the elderly
population would grow, as would old-age chronic
disease costs.
16(No Transcript)
17Net impact
- On balance, costs likely would fall, but only
modestly. Net savings would be small. Warner
et al., Tobacco Control, 1999 - TC community should stick to the real reason to
combat smoking its devastating health effects.
18Myth 3 (TI)
- A large tax increase is dangerous because it
will reduce government revenues by decreasing
legal cigarette sales. This will result due to
decreased smoking and increased smuggling of
lower-priced cigarettes from neighboring states
or countries.
19When and how the myth is used
- Whenever governments consider a cigarette excise
tax increase. - Intent to frighten officials into believing
that a policy intended to increase revenue will
do the opposite, and that it will introduce
organized crime into the state or country.
20Reality,with regard to cigarette sales...
- Cigarette taxation will reduce cigarette sales.
- Increasing price is the most effective means of
decreasing cigarette smoking, especially among
children. - 10 price increase will decrease cigarette
consumption 4 in developed countries, 8 in
developing countries. - Smoking among children will fall by about twice
as much. Chaloupka et al., Ch. 10 in Jha and
Chaloupka, 2000
21Real cigarette prices per capita consumption
US, 1970-2000
3100
180
2900
160
2700
140
2500
Cigarettes per capita
Price (1982/84 cents)
2300
120
2100
100
1900
80
1700
1500
60
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
Year
consumption
price
22Reality with regard to revenues...
- Increased taxes invariably increase government
revenues. - The percentage decline in cigarette consumption
is smaller than the percentage increase in price
that induces it. - Further, tax is only a fraction of price, so a
given tax increase will cause a far smaller
decrease in cigarette sales.
23Federal cigarette tax rate cigarette tax
revenue in the US
0.30
7
6.5
1960-2000
0.25
(1982/84 cents)
6
5.5
(billions of 1982/84 )
0.20
5
0.15
4.5
Real cigarette tax rate per pack
4
0.10
3.5
3
0.05
Real cigarette tax revenue
2.5
0.00
2
1960
1962
1964
1966
1968
1970
1972
1974
1976
1978
1980
1982
1984
1986
1988
1990
1992
1994
1996
1998
2000
Year
Cigarette tax rate
Cigarette tax renenue
24Reality with regard to smuggling...
- Function of many forces
- Price but one.
- Others likely far more important
- a states or countrys general tolerance for
corruption - its specific efforts to combat smuggling (use of
unique tax stamps, enforcement, etc.). - Informal cross-border purchases (buttlegging)
accounts for a small share of in-state tax
avoidance. - Joossens and Raw, BMJ, 2000
25Myth 4 (TI)
- Even if a tax increase would raise government
revenues and decrease smoking, it is
fundamentally unfair because its burden would
fall disproportionately on the poor.
26When and how the myth is used
- Whenever governments consider a cigarette excise
tax increase. - Intent to appeal to officials concern for the
welfare of the least privileged in society, and
to their basic sense of fairness.
27Reality...
- Cigarette taxes are regressive.
- A larger proportion of the poor smoke.
- However, a tax increase may produce a progressive
impact - because the rich decrease their smoking only
slightly in response to a price increase - the poor decrease theirs substantially.
- Townsend et al., BMJ, 1994
28Furthermore...
- Health benefit of a tax increase is distinctly
progressive. - States and countries can compensate in part for
any tax regressivity - e.g., by funding cessation services and
pharmaceuticals for poor smokers.