Our government has adopted
the lofty goal of making New Zealand smoke free by 2025. There has been some discussion on whether tobacco
prohibition is practical but none on what will be the unintended consequences. A packet of twenty cigarettes now cost $17
and the price is set to rise by 10 percent a year. The assumption is that the price
will cause all smokers to quit. While
the number of smokers has been falling for forty years our experience with hard
drugs shows that price is no barrier for an addict.
The reported rise in amount
of duty free cigarettes entering the country indicates that the price has caused
an increase in private “importing”. Down
my road a farmer is, legally selling tobacco plants. Soon criminals will
organize the private importing and growing.
We are creating the conditions to grow organized crime.
No one has asked whether
the price of cigarettes is the reason for a rise in child poverty. The Health Promotion
Agency, the Crown entity that promotes tobacco control, knows the tobacco tax is
taking food off the table because on its website it has an illustration of the amount
of food a packet of loose tobacco can buy – a bag of potatoes, a packet of
peas, tomatoes and vegetables, some chicken legs, two loaves of bread and a
large bottle of milk.
The Health Department first
advocated an increase in the price of tobacco to discourage smoking in the
Lange Government. I asked in cabinet “Where
is the cost/benefit analysis?” There was
not one. If there was a cost/benefit you
can be sure the anti- smoking advocates would have produced it.
Giving up smoking is the best
thing you can do for your individual health up.
There are benefits to your family.
The dangers of passive smoking are hyped because there is little
evidence that you giving up smoking is of significant benefit to others. Car
fumes kill more New Zealanders a year than passive smoking.
It is politically incorrect
to point this out but we non-smokers benefit from smokers. Their average life
expectancy is just 65 so they are helping the affordability of super. It is a myth that smokers are a burden on the
Health System. The grim health facts are
whether you smoke or not you are going to die and for most of us half our life
time health costs occur in the last six months of our life.
The difference in health
cost is what we die of and how long we live. Lung cancer does not cost the
health system a great deal because there is no cure. Hospitals now regularly refuse treatments to
smokers. The people who are going to be a
real burden to the health system are non-smokers like us who are going to live
long enough to come down with really expensive conditions like Alzheimer’s.
Government is addicted to
the billion dollars of taxes smokers pay each year. The government has been
spending just $40 million year on measures for smokers so the tobacco tax is a
straight transfer of wealth from the poorest citizens to the rest of us.
Maori are the country’s
principle smokers. The income transfer by
the tobacco tax from Maori to Non-Maori is significantly greater than the cost
of Treaty settlements. If a political
party were to advocate a tax that was mainly paid by Maori and spent mainly to
benefit non-Maori there would be claims to the Waitangi Tribunal and marches on
parliament. It is ironical that Maori
MPs have led the charge for the tobacco tax.
In Mr. Cunliffe’s Labour
Party Conference speech he correctly stated there are some households who
struggle to put food on the table. He
then said that this is because the rich and corporations are not paying their
share of taxes. Mr. Cunliffe is wrong in
his claims about income tax but he was more right than he realized. No
corporation and very few rich people pay the tobacco tax.
The full reasons for
poverty are complex. We have issues of
inter-generational benefit lead households and successive generations failing
at school. But the reason some households
do not have enough money to put food on the table for their children is the tax
on tobacco. If “two New Zealand’s” is
the number one issue as Mr. Cunliffe claims then Labour and the Greens should
be campaigning to reduce the tobacco tax.
But for the tobacco tax there
has never been a better time to be poor.
Benefits are inflation proof.
Family Support is seeing hundreds of millions of dollars being
transferred to the working poor.
In the 1970s in my
electorate it was not uncommon to have as many as 12 children and adults living
in a house. Social Welfare would not
lend beneficiaries money for bonds, furniture and sometimes even cars as the Department
does today. Yet I do not recall going to
a house where the children were hungry.
Today I know of households
where the children sometimes have nothing to eat. In every one of those household all the
adults are paying the tobacco tax.
I am not sympathetic to the
adults who put their addiction first. I am sympathetic to the plight of hungry
children. Those adults know if they
send hungry children to school with no lunch the school will ring Welfare so
the children are kept home from school. The
tobacco tax not only makes children hungry it deprives them of education.
Most smokers do put their
children first but their children are poorer than the children of non-
smokers. Poverty is bad for your
health. The tobacco tax is increasing child
poverty and that poverty is affecting those children’s health.
When child poverty was
lower in the fifties a packet of cigarettes was just 45 cents. In the seventies it was less than $2. A 30g packet of loose tobacco, the smoke of
choice of our poorest citizens, now costs $32-50.
The real gap that is
growing is not between rich and poor but between smokers and non-smokers. Children do not choose to have parents who
smoke.
Every smoker I know is
fully aware of the health risks.
White, middle class, males
gave up smoking over thirty years ago long before any government campaign. When I was first elected to parliament I
wondered what the tall copper cylinders around the debating chamber were for. They seemed an odd shape to be ash trays.
They were spittoons for chewing tobacco.
The country gave up chewing tobacco without any government intervention. One day smoking will be as rare as tobacco
chewing.
There is a technical answer
to smoking. Electronic cigarettes put
out a harmless water vapor. The
electronic cigarette that truly meets the smoker’s addiction has nicotine. (While nicotine is not good for you it is the
other things in tobacco that give you cancer).
The Health Department is opposed to electric cigarettes containing
nicotine.
If you have the money you
can import electronic cigarettes with nicotine from America. The poor are forced by the Health Department to
get their nicotine fix in the most dangerous way from tobacco. If we liberalized
the restrictions on electronic cigarettes most of the five thousand deaths
attributed to tobacco smoking each year could be prevented. Of course those who advise against liberalisation
are not influenced by the fact their jobs would go and the government would
lose a billion dollars a year in tax.
Here is another thought for
Mr. Cunliffe. He is looking for 800,000 people
who did not vote – this happens to be approximately the number of smokers. In the households I know where the children occasionally
go hungry none of the adults vote. If
you were a smoker why would you vote for the people who tax you so hard that you
struggle to feed your children?
4 comments:
But for the tobacco tax there has never been a better time to be poor. Benefits are inflation proof. Family Support is seeing hundreds of millions of dollars being transferred to the working poor
Which is why we absolutely still need ACT - or need Colin Craig.
Because in spite of what he says - this current government is the most-left-wing ever in NZ's history. Yep - Key's government is further to the left than Hellen Klark.
Still sad to think our government probably makes more profit from the sale of addictive drugs than any criminal organization in the country. Well said Richard. Irony and hypocrisy are two words our politicians do not seem to understand.
"No one has asked whether the price of cigarettes is the reason for a rise in child poverty."
I have:
http://lindsaymitchell.blogspot.co.nz/2013/06/truth-column-may-24.html
Well said Richard. I too have been vocal about how this is going to affect the children. I am now seeing more smokers around where I live then ever and wonder how much of it is the "stress relief" a cigarette gives smokers. Things are not easy out there!
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