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Tobacco tax rise in Australia ‘exploits and punishes’ addicted

Cigarette prices in Australia rose yet again last weekend, reports News.com.za, to become the highest in the world. Colin Mendelsohn, chair of the Australian Tobacco Harm Reduction Association and an associate professor at the University of New South Wales, said the tobacco tax rise exploits and punishes addicted smokers.

The September rise was the second this year, and already they were not cheap. Cigarettes will rise 12.5 per cent from 71 cents to 80 cents per stick.

The average price of a 25 pack of cigarettes will rise from $25-$30 to $28.25 — $33.90.

According to analysis by finder.com.au, a pack-a-day smoker will now be spending close to $922 a month with the tax increase, an increase of over $100 a month.

Tax will rise from 66 per cent of the price of cigarettes to 69 per cent.

The Government bans the sale of e-cigarettes that contain nicotine, even though these are 95 per cent less harmful than cigarettes.

In April, the New South Wales Parliament passed into law the Smoke-free Environment Amendment Bill 2018, which bans vaping from the same spaces in which cigarettes are banned.

NSW joined Queensland, Victoria, Tasmania and the ACT in introducing laws banning the use of the controversial product from July this year in areas including shopping centres, cinemas, libraries, trains, buses, public swimming pools, parks, sports grounds and outdoor dining areas.

 

Colin Mendelsohn, chair of the Australian Tobacco Harm Reduction Association, says the tobacco tax rise exploits and punishes addicted smokers.

Is today’s tobacco excise rise a genuine attempt to reduce smoking rates or a tax grab by a greedy government, exploiting and punishing smokers for their addiction?

Most smokers think it is the latter.

Cigarette prices have doubled in Australia since 2008 and are now the highest in the world. A 20-pack of Marlboro costs an eye-watering $27 in Australia or $9,855 per year for a pack-a-day smoker. In Australian dollars, the same pack costs only $16.67 in the UK, $9.51 in the US and $1.47 in Vietnam.

Increasing tobacco taxes is a proven strategy for reducing smoking rates but appears to be having a diminishing effect at these stratospheric levels. There remains a population of addicted smokers who will continue to smoke no matter what the price.

Despite annual price increases, there was no significant fall in Australian smoking rates from 2013 to 2016, according to the 3-yearly National Drug Strategy Household Surveys. Adult smoking rates increased in New South Wales from 13.5% to 15.1% between 2015 and 2016, and national cigarette consumption rose in 2017 for the first time in a decade according to the National Accounts.

Tobacco excise delivered a massive $12.5 billion to government coffers in the last financial year. However, this tax is particularly cruel at a time of zero wage growth. High prices exploit the most marginalised members of the community, such as low income groups, Indigenous people and people with substance use and mental illness.

The most disadvantaged have more than twice the smoking rates of the more privileged and have more difficulty quitting. For those unable to quit, high taxes are regressive, punitive and increase financial hardship and health inequalities. A pack-a-day smoker on Newstart spends 68% of their annual income on smoking, leaving very little for food, accommodation and other essentials.

The average household in Australia spends more on tobacco than they do on domestic holidays, motor vehicles, takeaway food, telecommunications or electricity.

Another unwanted effect of high prices has been the exponential growth in the illicit tobacco industry. Illicit tobacco from smuggling and illicit tobacco crops makes up 15 per cent to 28 per cent of the total tobacco market and funds organised crime and terrorism.

Australia’s tobacco control policy has always focused on telling smokers to just quit, also known as the ‘quit or die’ approach. However, smoking is a uniquely addictive habit. Seventy per cent of Australian smokers want to quit and most try repeatedly and fail, even with the best treatments. Continuing smokers remain at high risk and up to two out of three will die from a smoking-related disease.

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