That over 27 per cent of tobacco consumers in India fall in the
15-24 year age bracket amply demonstrates how successful the tobacco companies
have been in continually enticing the vulnerable sections of the population into
the suicidal practice. The addition of new customers every year even as
thousands of patrons die annually ensures that the tobacco companies’ customer
base remains wide and tall. If the global tobacco-related mortality is about 5.5
million people annually, India’s burden alone is nearly one million. With nearly
35 per cent of the adult population in the country addicted to the dangerous
substance rolled in paper or leaf or packed in plastic sachets, India is the
second largest consumer of tobacco products in the world. Besides the high
levels of mortality and morbidity, there is a huge economic cost involved in
treating people with diseases caused directly or indirectly by tobacco use. As a
result, the out-of-pocket expenditure on medical treatment results in “higher
poverty rates.” A recently released Health Ministry report estimates that 9.3
lakh people in India are affected by the health costs of tobacco. According to
the report, the total health expenditure burden of tobacco in the year 2011 was
a little over Rs.100,000 crore. To put it in perspective, the amount was “12 per
cent more than the combined State and central government expenditure on health
in 2011-12.” The revenue earned through excise duty in the same year was a
paltry 17 per cent of the health burden of tobacco. The “benefit” argument of
revenue generation through sales therefore stands completely negated.
It is for these reasons that the Central government, which
considers health to be one of the priority areas, should simultaneously
implement multiple strategies to prevent people, particularly children as young
as 15 years, from getting addicted to nicotine and help the existing users to
quit smoking and/or chewing tobacco. If the government is indeed serious about
reducing the prevalence by 15 per cent by 2020 and 30 per cent by 2025, the most
effective way of achieving it is by raising taxes. It is indeed heartening that
the new Union Health Minister “supports” higher taxes on cigarettes and tobacco
products; raising tax on tobacco is the WHO’s theme this year. But for any tax
increase to become effective, the price difference between various brands and
different tobacco products must be minimal. But India follows a bizarre,
producer-friendly excise duty structure for cigarettes, beedis and chewing
tobacco that makes a mockery of taxation. Hence, a complete overhaul of the
taxation system is warranted to achieve the desired benefits. It is time the
tobacco issue was addressed with greater seriousness.
கருத்துகள் இல்லை:
கருத்துரையிடுக