EDITORIAL

Stub it out

By Suchada Tupchai

On December 7 the cabinet passed a Finance Ministry proposal to increase excise duty on tobacco from 75 percent to 79 percent. This is another of the so-called “sin taxes” and will increase foreign and Thai cigarette prices by 3-8 baht per packet. The intent is to increase government sector income by 3-4 billion baht and reduce the consumption of cigarettes and tobacco. The increases become effective from the date they were passed.

In the past, while the world has been awakened to the dangers of smoking, Thailand’s tobacco manufacturers have increased production output from 23 billion cigarettes to 47 billion cigarettes per year to meet domestic and foreign market demand, bringing net profits of 4,300 billion baht, at an annual increase of 9 percent. Tobacco manufacturing is a very nice government enterprise and has been one of the government’s top income earners for years. During the same period the government has allotted only about 10 million baht for anti-smoking campaign budgets. This has resulted in Thailand spending tens of billions of baht in treating patients afflicted with smoking related diseases and this also increases annually.

A study conducted by the National Statistics Office on smoking behavior revealed that regular smokers nationwide spend 51.43 billion baht annually. The figures vary regionally depending on total smokers and total cigarettes smoked. The Central region spends the most followed by the Northeast, Bangkok and surrounding areas, the South and the North respectively.

The excise tax increase is just one of the measures proposed by the World Health Organization and the Anti Smoking Foundation in order to stop smoking through higher cigarette prices. Global research on smoking shows that most addicts are the under-educated and are poor. In Thailand, seven out of 10 addicts have only a primary school education. The government still lacks sincerity in reducing the smoking figures in this group even though theoretically cigarettes destroy the market, meaning the more the number of smokers, the more society is hurt.

Even though it affects all sectors it is the duty of the government and the duty of the Public Health Ministry to consider the effects on society and to protect the rights of the non-smoker. Any measures used must be absolute, as should increases in excise tax. This means not just the organizing of big events on World Anti-Smoking Day and then sitting back and allowing the number of smokers to increase. Be strict on sin tax!