Tuesday, August 21, 2012

SMOKING: BANNING PRODUCTION

Smoking regulation has achieved some success; but it is pathetic that governments don’t have the honesty and sincerity to completely ban cigarette production globally – it’s clear how well money and lobbying works

The true return of this booming business is evident in the fact that in every eight seconds, tobacco use claims a victim in some part of the world. That means around 5 million deaths annually. Moreover, trillions of filters, filled with toxic chemicals from tobacco smoke, pollute the environment as discarded waste every year. Realizing the importance of controlling this menace, many countries have laws in place to ban advertising and any kind of promotional activities related to smoking. Despite this, a 1998 survey found that tobacco companies were among the top 10 advertisers in 18 out of 66 countries surveyed.

Thus anti-smoking policies have worked to reduce tobacco consumption; but it is still a serious issue that needs to be brought under control. In such a situation, it is often debated whether banning the tobacco production itself as a policy decision would deliver the desired results. There are complications on this front. Chinese counterfeit cigarette production reached an unprecedented 400 billion cigarettes a year, enough to supply every US smoker with 460 packs a year in just one decade since 1997; making Yunxiao the “illegal cigarette manufacturing capital of the world.” Also, there is a case of a conflict of interest, since the tobacco industry funds government treasuries massively every year.

To ban cigarette production will not only need strong political will, but as the 2005 movie Thank You For Smoking clearly showed, will need a lot of honesty – with the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement between four largest US tobacco companies and 46 US states, which freed the companies of liability due to harm caused by tobacco use – being a shocking example.