ISLAMABAD: Health experts and anti-tobacco activists urged the government to harmonise cigarette taxes with the World Health Organization (WHO) guidelines to protect youth from falling victim to smoking, a consequence of the current affordability of cigarettes.
During a media interaction on Tuesday at the national press club, health experts including Dr Maleek Haider said the imposition of low taxes on cigarettes in Pakistan make them cheaper that not only increases the number of smokers every year but also smoking related diseases and health bill for the government.
One of the latest studies on smoking in Pakistan conducted by Pakistan Institute of Development Economics revealed that 86 percent of the cost of smoking-induced diseases is borne by individuals in 35–64 age group.
Alarmingly, it also states that total cost of mortality and morbidity by smoking accounts for 1.6 percent of GDP of a country that spends less than one percent of its GDP on healthcare.
Shedding light on why cigarettes are cheap, the study disclosed that it is due to overlooking at the guidelines set by the WHO, PIDE study stated.
The WHO guidelines state that “threshold of 70 percent of the retail price or the level required to cover the costs tobacco makes the country incur. In the latter case, the increase would be four to five times what the tax rate is now. In the short-run, the rates on the two tax tiers should be increased with a higher increase for the second tier so that the gap between them is minimized. In the long run, however, the two-tier system should be abolished to have a single-tier system. This would help in bringing the poor out of the vicious cycle of poverty in addition to reducing the smoking-related disease burden.”
The total revenue collected from cigarettes taxation in the fiscal year 2021-22 was Rs 150 billion. Hence, the economic and health cost imposed by smoking on society is 3.65 times higher than the overall tax collected from the tobacco industry.
Similarly, the smoking-attributable direct cost is 8.3 percent of the total health expenditures, which is significantly high. Likewise, the total economic cost of smoking is almost equal (1.03 times) to the public sector health spending (both federal and provincial), said the PIDE report.
Malik Imran Ahmad, Country Head of the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids (CTFK), also pointed out high prevalence of tobacco use in the country, with 31.9 million adults (15 years and above) consuming tobacco products, accounting for about 19.7% of the adult population.
Dr Aman Khan, Director, Waseela Foundation shared that multinational cigarette manufacturers know how to mislead the masses about smoking.
Copyright Business Recorder, 2024