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August 8, 2008

Holiday cigarettes to go up in smoke

The tradition of bringing back hundreds of cheap cigarettes from holidays abroad is about to go up in a puff of smoke.

Proposals are currently being examined which would see a dramatic increase in the tax on tobacco throughout the EU region. The moves are being made after research by the World Bank showed that burning a hole in people’s pockets is the best way to reduce the level of smoking.

Experts say that the proposed increase would cut the number of smokers by an average of 10pc over the next five years.

It is thought that changes will have the biggest impact in Poland where they expect more than 20pc to give up as a result of price increases.

The proposal outlined by Taxation Commissioner, Laszlo Kovacs, is for a gradual increase in EU minimum taxation levels on cigarettes and fine-cut tobacco up to 2014.

It would also remove loopholes that allow some cigarettes or fine-cut tobacco to be presented as cigars, cigarillos or pipe tobacco and so benefit from a lower tax rate.

The plan also aims to bring tobacco taxation levels in line across all 27 EU member states.

At the moment, the difference in taxation can be as high as 600pc leading to intra-EU tobacco smuggling especially in the new member states.

The level of smuggling varies across the EU and accounts for up to 9pc of the EU tobacco market. But in some major markets this is as high as 20pc. The countries most susceptible to illegal tobacco are those closest to Russia and other markets that do not impose high tax on cigarettes.

Mr Kovacs said it would also make the taxation rules more transparent, and create a level playing field for manufacturers and give flexibility to member states to set minimum taxes.

July 18, 2008

Tobacco industry ‘manipulating menthol cigarettes

Washington - A new study has found that manufacturers are deliberately manipulating menthol content in cigarettes to attract young people.cigarettes

Researchers from Harvard School of Public Health found that the tobacco industry is intentionally adjusting menthol to create a milder experience for the first time smoker.

Menthol covers the harshness and irritation of cigarettes, allowing delivery of an effective dose of nicotine, the addictive chemical in cigarettes.

"For decades, the tobacco industry has carefully manipulated menthol content not only to lure youth but also to lock in lifelong adult customers," said Howard Koh, Professor and Associate Dean for Public Health Practice at HSPH and a co-author of the paper.

A team of researchers led Jennifer M. Kreslake, a research analysis from the Tobacco Control Research Program at HSPH analysed the internal tobacco industry documents on menthol product development, and conducted laboratory tests to measure menthol content in U.S. brands, examined market research reports

She also drew data from the 2006 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, an annual nationally representative survey among U.S. residents aged 12 years and older

The industry documents revealed that tobacco companies researched how controlling menthol levels could increase brand sales among specific groups.

The companies determined that products with higher menthol levels and stronger perceived menthol sensation suited long-term smokers of menthol cigarettes while milder brands with lower menthol levels appealed to younger smokers.

According to a 2006 study, 43.8 percent of current smokers aged 12 to 17 years reported that they used menthol cigarettes as did 35.6 percent of current smokers aged 18 to 24 years.

By contrast, 30.6 percent of smokers older than 35 years reported menthol use.

The authors suggest, "to protect the public health, tobacco products should be federally regulated, and additives such as menthol should be included in that regulation."

"This is another example of the cynical behavior of the tobacco industry to hook teens and African Americans to a deadly addiction. This is after the industry told the American public it had changed its marketing practices. The FDA bill provides the vehicle to end the hypocrisy and save the lives of the young and a targeted minority group," said Gregory N. Connolly, Professor of the Practice of Public Health and director of the Tobacco Control Research Program at HSPH.

The study appears in the online "First Look" section of the American Journal of Public Health.

June 30, 2008

Japan Makes Cigarettes Kinda Kool Again

Living in America, we all know that smoking cigarettes is probably the worst sin you can possibly take part in. I’m actually a long time smoker myself, but hopefully I’ll quit in the next month or so. The Japanese recently modified the Kool cigarette to help out smokers who simply aren’t getting enough flavor with every draw. The modification is a simple one where a tiny ball inside the filter can be squeezed to shoot extra flavor into the smoke you are inhaling. At first I thought it was a joke, but then I remembered that the Japanes introduce really odd things like this on a daily basis. The Kool “Boosts” were originally designed in 2007.

May 6, 2008

Don’t falter on cigarette tax hike

An increase in the state cigarette tax is long overdue and the Legislature should approve one this session. But lawmakers shouldn’t rush into the Medicaid expansion recommended by the Senate Finance Committee. Something less ambitious is needed.
Last month, the Finance Committee approved, for the second year in a row, a major expansion of the state Medicaid program. Critics reasonably question whether the receipts from a 50-cent tax will be enough to cover the cost.
Sen. Larry Grooms, R-Berkeley, argues that the program expansion will be followed by an increase in participation that can’t be sustained by the tax hike.
Sen. Grooms, led an effort to use anticipated tax revenues, some $159 million, to provide tax credits to small companies for medical insurance for the working poor. That plan has the benefit of engaging the marketplace in a health care solution.
Senate President Pro Tempore Glenn McConnell says the Finance Committee plan for expanding Medicaid doesn’t have sufficient support in the full Senate for passage.
The Senate leader supports the tax credit idea, but says revenue from the tax hike also could be used to bolster the previous Medicaid expansion for children, as well as educational programs aimed at reducing tobacco use among young people. His compromise is worth exploring.
At 7 cents a pack, the state tax on discount cigarettes is the lowest in the nation, and hasn’t been increased in 20 years. An increase would raise money for health care programs but, as important, would likely reduce cigarette consumption, based on the experience elsewhere.
That in itself would be a step forward in the state’s general health and well-being.
The Legislature should recognize the general health care benefits that can be gained from taxing cheap cigarettes and move toward a solution that can be enacted this year.

April 22, 2008

Australian legislation on the way to ban flavoured cigarettes

As a result of an agreement between state and federal health ministers, the sale of flavoured cigaretteswill be banned in Australia.
Nicola Roxon the Federal Health Minister met her state counterparts in Melbourne at the Australian Health Minister Conference last week in order to thrash out a range of health issues.
Ms Roxon says the cigarette ban will target tobacco products flavoured either with chocolate or fruit flavours with the intention of enticing children and young people to smoke.
A ban on their importation is being considered and although the sale of the flavoured cigarettes is already banned in some states including NSW and South Australia, lemon, orange, strawberry and apple flavoured cigarettes are currently available alongside regular flavoured cigarettes in several states and territories.
The ministers have also agreed to draw up national regulations and guidelines for the use of solariums in order to help ensure young people do not risk getting skin cancer.
They plan to utilise steps already taken in Victoria to regulate the solarium industry and Ms Roxon says have adopted some national principles that will be put in place.
A $15 million funding boost will also give health workers greater access to specialised mental health training and go towards training 24,000 health workers to enhance their skills when they are dealing in particular with patients with complex mental health problems.

March 31, 2008

Oz to get ‘fire-proof’ cigarettes

A meeting of emergency services ministers in Canberra on Wednesday deliberated upon the need for introducing "fire-proof" cigarettes that get extinguished on their own as the smoker drops the butt, a measure that may help reduce the risk of fires in homes and the bush.
New South Wales (NSW) Emergency Services Minister Nathan Rees moved the resolution to make the reduced fire risk (RFR) cigarettes, which are already produced overseas in Canada and New York, mandatory under the Trade Practices Act as early as next year.
"We hope this will be law by early 2009, requiring all cigarettes manufactured and sold throughout Australia to be self-extinguishing," the Daily Telegraph quoted him as saying.
"Every day’s delay is another day we live with the risk that someone will be killed or injured or homes or bush land destroyed because cigarettes keep burning when they are dropped or thrown from a car window," he added.
Each year, around 4500 fires are caused by cigarette ignitions in Australia. Fires, directly attributed to cigarettes, claimed about 65 lives between 2000 and 2005.
A significant decline has resulted in fire deaths in New York since the introduction of RFR cigarettes in New York in 2004, according to preliminary data.
According to NSW Fire Brigades, a normal cigarette dropped on furnishings may start a fire in less than 18 minutes, whereas an RFR cigarette extinguishes on its own.
Rees said that some people in the industry had expressed non-acceptance to the introduction of the RFR cigarette, complaining about costs, difficulties in testing, and compliance and production lead times.
"NSW does not accept that the industry needs an 18-month to two-year time frame to introduce these cigarettes, which are already being produced and sold in Canada and a number of states in the US," he said.
The newspaper report says that the Australian tobacco industry is concerned that no testing has been done to ensure that the cigarettes do not pose a further risk to smokers’ health.

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