Beware Secondhand Rhetoric on Cigarette Taxes

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cigarettes and moneyThroughout the 1980s and 1990s, the U.S. tobacco industry enjoyed tremendous success in beating back tobacco tax increases at all levels of government. But as the industry becomes ever more reviled and the economy goes further in the tank, raising cigarette taxes has become a much easier political proposition. Twelve states raised their cigarette tax in 2007 and 2008, with proposed legislation to do the same in 17 more states, as of February 2009. The federal government recently approved a tobacco tax increase of almost 62 cents per pack. When it goes into effect on April 1, it will bring the total federal tax on a pack of cigarettes to $1.00, to help fund the State Children's Health Insurance Program.

It's a far cry from the heyday of Philip Morris' (PM's) national public relations and communications machine, whose sole purpose was to trounce any effort to raise tobacco taxes at any level of government. Throughout the 1990s, PM would unleash its formidable arsenal at the first whiff of a tax effort. Its tactics included fake "grassroots" organizations, legions of lobbyists, video news releases to ensure favorable "news" coverage, anti-tax messages on their products and widely-disseminated economic studies predicting disaster if the tax should increase. In the 1980s and early 1990s, the Tobacco Institute had a similar PR machine in place, creating a bulwark against tax increases that may be unparalleled in history.

While the tobacco industry's PR machines have since lost effectiveness, their arguments still influence debates today. Blogs and editorial pages around the country repeat the industry's anti-tax arguments. For example, a February 22, 2009, editorial in the Daily Herald of Wausau, Michigan, opined that cigarette taxes are regressive, hitting poor people the hardest; that raising the cigarette tax would stimulate smuggling; and that there is essentially no relationship between taxes and smoking rates. Every one of these time-worn arguments can be found in a 1983 Tobacco Institute report titled "New or Restated Economic Arguments Against Excise Tax Rate Increase on Cigarettes." More importantly, all of them have been disproved by historical experience.

Do cigarette taxes disproportionately burden the poor?

It is true that poor smokers spend a greater percentage of their income on cigarettes, and that a larger percentage of poor people smoke than rich people. However, the benefits of an increased tax will accrue to those who bear the burden of paying the tax.

As cigarette prices increase, people tend to smoke less, quit altogether or fail to take up the addiction at all. This leads to improved health among poor communities, as well as significant savings for low-income former smokers. Teenagers, who are often counted among the poor, are disproportionately affected by tax increases. Tobacco companies know this. PM marketing researcher Myron Johnston wrote in an internal report titled "Teenage Smoking and the Federal Excise Tax on Cigarettes":

[A] ten percent increase in the price of cigarettes would lead to a decline of 12 percent in the number of teenagers who would otherwise begin to smoke. ... [I]t is clear that price has an pronounced effect on the smoking prevalence of teenagers, and that the goals of reducing teenage smoking and balancing the budget would both be served by increasing the Federal Excise Tax on cigarettes.

Nearly thirty years ago, the industry secretly recognized that raising cigarette taxes would curb teen smoking while boosting public revenue.

Does raising cigarette taxes lead to smuggling?

If a state raises its tobacco tax substantially above that of neighboring states, it can lead to cross-border cigarette smuggling. That's why the tax rates of neighboring states are usually taken into account when a tax increase is being considered. It's a simple matter of good public policy to set cigarette taxes at a level that will discourage -- or at least won't encourage -- smuggling.

In 1994, in response to efforts to increase tobacco taxes in Arizona and Colorado, R.J. Reynolds formed a front group called the National Coalition Against Crime and Tobacco Contraband (NCACTC). The NCACTC hired Rod Stamler, a former assistant commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, to "study" cigarette smuggling in Arizona and Colorado, and disseminate the results to the media in those states. A 1994 RJR letter stressed that NCATC's tobacco ties must remain secret. Another document drafted for NCACTC "members" by RJR suggests highlighting stories of retailers who had multiple robberies after a cigarette tax increase. It warns, "The United States ... may soon be on the verge of a return to smuggling and a black market not seen since Prohibition."

The tobacco industry has not only fanned fears of smuggling, it's actually created and stimulated smuggling rings, to pressure governments to roll back cigarette taxes. The most famous example involves Canada, which in 1991 doubled its tobacco tax. The following year, RJR subsidiary Northern Brands devised a convoluted scheme to smuggle cigarettes into Canada through the St. Regis Mohawk / Akwesasne Indian Reservation in upstate New York. RJR's scheme fleeced the Canadian and U.S. governments out of hundreds of millions of dollars in income, and the surge in black market sales led Canada to roll back its tax. The scam even allowed the industry to point to Canada as "an example of a country that was devastated by cigarette smuggling" in the wake of a tax increase.

Eventually, RJR's smuggling arrangement was discovered, and Canada sued RJR in U.S. courts. RJR's Northern Brands pleaded guilty and paid $15 million in penalties. But they weren't the only ones -- British American Tobacco, Brown & Williamson and Philip Morris affiliates have all been implicated in smuggling schemes around the world.

Where does the money go?

money bagsWhile the smuggling and regressive tax arguments are largely specious, it's important to carefully consider where the funds raised by a tobacco tax increase will go.

A frequently cited and pragmatic goal of raising tobacco taxes is to discourage smoking. This means that cigarette sales -- and tobacco tax revenue -- will also decrease over time. Therefore, tobacco taxes should be used to fund needs that will similarly diminish. Examples include smoking cessation programs, health care assistance for smokers suffering from lung disease and medically-supervised nicotine addiction therapy and treatment.

While using cigarette taxes to fund the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) may be appealing, its cost will almost certainly rise over time. Even worse, relying on cigarette taxes to fund such a crucial healthcare program makes government dependent on stable or increased smoking rates, for continued healthcare funding.

How governments use cigarette tax money determines whether they have a responsible relationship with the tobacco industry. To be responsible, the relationship must be in the best long-term interests of the public health, not the tobacco industry. Philip Morris long ago recognized the benefit of cigarette taxes that create government dependency on the industry, because they essentially turn government into a financial partner -- a relationship that strengthens the industry's future. Its 1987 strategic plan stated, "To the extent that governmental bodies tend to regard this [tobacco] tax as 'cash flow' there is a degree of reluctance to destroy the industry."

What are the arguments in favor of raising cigarette taxes?

There are many good reasons why government would want to increase tobacco taxes: reducing cigarette consumption, encouraging smokers to quit and discouraging teens from even trying cigarettes. In the longer term, if used correctly, cigarette taxes can help wind down and eventually eliminate nicotine addiction.

Once the misleading anti-tax arguments promoted decades ago by the tobacco industry's PR machine are discounted, the benefits are clear.

Perhaps the single, best argument, though, is that -- unlike taxes on food, gas or homes -- no one has to pay a cigarette tax, if they really don't want to.


Anne Landman is the editor of the TobaccoWiki collection on SourceWatch.

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How to use academic institutions as PR fronts: ask tobacco.

Secondhand smoke and related issues of "harm to others" are what the tobacco and drug industries spend the most time worrying about. It's an issue that also concerns the coal and petroleum industries, the agrichemical industry, and all other who emit toxins into the atmosphere, groundwater, rivers, lakes, etc - from owners of dirty diesel truck and ship fleets to cyanide-leach gold mine operators. What they don't want to see is full-cost accounting - they want to make sure that such "externalities" do not affect government tax policy, regulatory policy or their bottom lines.

This can be seen in recent academic policy as well - for example, there is an ongoing effort to ban tobacco funding in science, that had the University of California administration up in arms in 2007:

"UC Balks at Campus-Wide Ban on Tobacco Money for Research
David Grimm, Science Magazine, 26 January 2007"

"Concerned about academic freedom, the University of California (UC) has delayed voting on a plan to impose a blanket ban on research funding from tobacco companies."

Other people have argued that tobacco corporations created an illegal enterprise to defraud the public, with the funding of university research programs being the first step in that effort, the goal being the production of "independent third-party research results that cast doubt on the link between tobacco and cancer, etc." which could then be disseminated to a wider audience via the use of public relations, compliant reporters, and other co-conspirators at large media corporations, many of whom receive lucrative kickbacks for their efforts.

There has been a long-standing effort to get universities in the U.S. to reject corporate tobacco money due to conflict-of-interest issues. The proper role of academic science is that of the independent auditor - "unbiased evaluation based on real data" - and if the auditor is being paid by the auditee, that raises conflict-of-issues that are widely recognized in finance, and are subject to strict legal oversight (insider trading, etc.). In academics, the aura of Ivory Tower purity means that anything goes, even though all leading U.S. academic institutions have large public-private partnerships with large corporations - and that immediately raises conflict-of-interest issues.

If you look into why the UC is so adamant about not refusing tobacco money, you discover that what they are worried most about is if other types of corporate "gift-giving" also come under scrutiny - namely, support from the pharmaceutical, fossil fuel and military-industrial contractors. The most common internal complaint is that accepting the ban on tobacco money would tarnish their Ivory Tower image, and might lead to Pfizer getting banned as well.

Should Pfizer be banned as well as Altria? Look at the "shocking" case of Reuben, who faked data on clinical trials related to Pfizer's non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, the non-opiate NSAIDS:

http://scienceblogs.com/insolence/2009/03/the_most_massive_scientific_fraud_ever.php

http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2009/03/11/a-new-low-in-drug-research-21-fabricated-studies/

For every one that gets caught, there are a dozen who don't - and look how blatant Reuben's fraud was - how do you fake clinical trials with no one around you knowing about it? This was also a guy who traveled extensively on Pfizer's tab to conferences to promote NSAIDS - and that's the norm. Shocking? Not really - typical is more like it.

This larger issue - corporate PR firms using their relationships with academics to develop propaganda masquerading as independent science - is one that academic institutions are going to have to face.

Taxing the victims

Smokers of typical cigarettes are not just "dirty" and "rude" convenient pools of regressive tax revenues, they are human beings...Guinea Pigs who are unwittingly, without Informed Consent, exposed to non-tobacco things like pesticide residues galore, high levels of dioxin from chlorine pesticides and bleached paper, radiation from the still "legal" use of certain phosphate fertilizers, added burn-accelerants, added addiction-enhancing substances, and any of over 1400 (!) untested, often toxic and carcinogenic non-tobacco additives. That any number of low-end brands may contain not a shred of tobacco but, instead, "tobacco substitute material" made from all sorts of industrial waste cellulose (from which evil Tobacco Smoke" is impossible), compounds the government-sanctioned fraud.

Taxes...not to mention significant penalties and compensatory damages...ought be applied not to the victims but to the suppliers of all those adulterants, to cigarette makers who assembled it all and then fraudulently and absurdly called the concoctions "tobacco", and to complicit public officials who've gone criminally AWOL from their duties to protect the public from exactly such threats, frauds, and harms.

amen!

I have been thinking that myself.If pm and rjr are so determined to stay in business and make there humongous fortunes....................let them pay the tax.I like the sound of that!Yes the taxes are outrageous.Lets see though,if cigs are up to like 9 bucks a pack,and the tax is say under 3 dollars,i think the the manufacturers would try to protect their assets by protecting their addicted clients,by keeping them addicted and lowering their prices to compensate.....................The world is just turning into even more of a big crap fest.Now ppl are going to be working to buy cigarettes,and gasoline,and hey there kids might get healthcare one day,but whats it going to matter if they cant feed the children.Stop breeding...........period.

Specious at best, Propaganda irregardless

In September 1982, when I began smoking at the age of 22, cigarettes were $3.33 for a carton at AAFES. This morning I paid $8.24 for one single pack. It passed ridiculous a long time ago. It is now plain theft! I can poke holes in ALL your best arguments with the single statement: "I am an American". I am afforded inalienable rights by the constitution, including the right to the pursuit of happiness. Regardless of the results of your UNAMERICAN taxes, your methods should be illegal. Research the Boston Tea Party!! I HAVE to pay the taxes when I REALLY don't want to because I will not give up my RIGHT to smoke! YOU WILL NOT MAKE ME QUIT BY STEALING FROM ME!!!!!!!

I have a suggestion for you...

How about applying some good ol' American innovation to solve the problem?

Get yourself some tobacco seeds, grow your own, roll it up and smoke it. Voila!

Smoke all you want, with no more taxes, and no more reason to complain.

Plus, you'll get to see what real, pure tobacco tastes and feels like without the smootheners, sweeteners, burn accelerators, fillers, [http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=Insect_Complaint bug larvae], [[Mold complaints|mold]], and other types of [[Types of Foreign Matter Found in Consumer Complaints in 1989|foreign matter]] found in commercial cigarettes.

Best of luck,
Anne Landman

Another suggestion

I believe the government should tax people that have body mass index (BMI) that is over 27%. A surcharge could be collected in restaurants and grocery stores (for certain foods determined to cause weight gain). It is very easy to determine BMI and put that number on one's driver's license. I think it is a good idea for the government to decide what we can eat.

Have you read A Brave New

Have you read A Brave New World? Or are you a sheep and really believe that the government is out for your best interests,smokers make an easy target because it is not healthy so no one really objects to putting a tax on it, believing it is for everyone's good.

Nope, bad idea.

"I think it is a good idea for the government to decide what we can eat."

I think that's a really bad idea. The problem is that our government's pronouncements about nutrition are already pretty much dictated by food industry lobbies.

Have you ever noticed that the government never says you shouldn't eat something, no matter how crappy it is? There's a reason for that. Having government tell us what we can eat would, in effect, be having the food industry tell us what we can eat.

I have a better suggestion

What makes you think that the government has any right to decide whether I smoke or not. It is none of your business what I do with my life. The benefits you list may be true but your point is moot. The government has absolutely no authority to determine whether people smoke or not. Moreover, what give you the right to make me pay for other peoples' health care? Is that the same make belief opinion that believes the government has any right to make sure people have health care? Whether someone has health care or not is not my problem.

This entire plan stinks of fascism, that is all it is. People like you who think you know what is best for everyone else and if we don't agree you are going to force it on us. What an jerk off response you wrote, telling someone to go grow his own tobacco. Where in the Constitution does it say I have to grow my own tobacco?

This complete lack of reality is why you end up with an idiotic argument like it provides money for children' health care and it will stop smoking. What kind of idiot can not realize that creating a program that is funded by taxing a something you want to stop will only create a program that is underfunded. Then again that is what fascist like you want, create a program that later must be paid for by the general population as no one would have accepted this SCHIP crap if they knew they had to pay for it.

It's clear you have never read the Constitution. Well maybe you have, your wrote down how you thought a perfect world would be run and then you called it the Constitution. In your world we are all ruled based on what you think is right. My opinion and freedom mean nothing if it does not jibe with yours. People like you have already made states like CA, NY and MI crap holes, now you want to spread that to the rest of the country. I can't wait to see how miserable the people of this country are in a few years. They deserve the government they got.

Philip Morris Admits There is No "Right to Smoke"

Philip Morris established long ago that there is no legal basis for a "right to smoke." In one of their previously privileged documents dated June 24, 1987 entitled "Project Down Under Conference Notes" (about dealing with the secondhand smoke issue), PM states,

"We won't be able to establish 'the right to smoke.' No legal basis for this 'right.' "

See the document for yourself [http://legacy.library.ucsf.edu/tid/vvm88d00 here]
Anne Landman
TobaccoWiki Editor