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CC WS PACKET 01142025
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CC WS PACKET 01142025
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$15 Minimum Price Key Points <br />●Raising the price of tobacco products is one of the most effective strategies for reducing initiation <br />of tobacco use, decreasing tobacco consumption, and increasing cessation of tobacco use. <br />●However, the tobacco industry knows that cheap prices help to lure new users and keep current <br />users hooked, so they spend billions of dollars each year on price discounts and coupons to <br />reduce prices. <br />1 <br />●Price discounts are the tobacco industry’s single largest marketing expenditure – typically 70–80% <br />of their spending on marketing and advertising. <br />2 <br />●Although increasing excise taxes has long been the primary way to raise tobacco prices, many <br />local jurisdictions do not have the legal authority to enact additional tobacco taxes, and the deep <br />discounts and coupons offered by tobacco companies can diminish the impact of such taxes. <br />3 <br />●Additional pricing policies can complement excise tax increases and counteract pernicious <br />industry practices that keep prices low. <br />4 <br />●The price of cigarettes is significantly related to their consumption: when cigarette prices rise, <br />people tend to smoke less or quit. The availability of cheap tobacco products increases rates of <br />tobacco use, particularly among young adults, who tend to be price-sensitive. <br />5 <br />●Research suggests that for every 10% increase in the price of cigarettes, adult smoking decreases <br />by 3–5% and youth smoking decreases by 6–7%; <br />6 some studies find even greater reductions. <br />●Studies show that when tobacco companies lower tobacco product prices in the face of rising <br />taxes, more people tend to purchase cigarettes, especially the young and new users. <br />7 <br />7 According to a 1994 U.S. Surgeon General's report, the use of price promotions makes cigarettes appear more <br />affordable to smokers with limited economic resources, including children. Evidence suggests that price promotions <br />also encourage new smokers to smoke more often, thereby entrenching their habit. U.S. DEP’T OF HEALTH & <br />HUMAN SERVICES, PREVENTING TOBACCO USE AMONG YOUNG PEOPLE: A REPORT OF THE SURGEON <br />GENERAL (1994), available at http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/sgr/1994/index.htm. <br />6 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Office of Policy, Performance, and Evaluation <br />5 Bader P, Boisclair D, Ferrence R. Effects of tobacco taxation and pricing on smoking behavior in high risk <br />populations: a knowledge synthesis. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2011 Nov;8(11):4118-39. doi: <br />10.3390/ijerph8114118. Epub 2011 Oct 26. PMID: 22163198; PMCID: PMC3228562. <br />4 Ibid. <br />3 POINT-OF-SALE TOBACCO PRICING POLICIES Equity, Public Health, and Legal Considerations; Change Lab <br />Solutions. <br />2 Federal Trade Commission Cigarette Report for 2021. Issued 2023. <br />1 Federal Trade Commission Cigarette Report for 2016. <br />www.ftc.gov/system/files/documents/reports/federal-trade-commission-cigarette-report-2016-federaltrade-commissi <br />on-smokeless-tobacco-report/ftc_cigarette_report_for_2016_0.pdf. Published 2018; Federal Trade Commission <br />Smokeless Tobacco Report for 2016. <br />www.ftc.gov/system/files/documents/reports/federal-trade-commission-cigarette-report-2016-federal-trade-commissi <br />on-smokeless-tobaccoreport/ftc_smokeless_tobacco_report_for_2016_0.pdf. Published 2018. <br />35
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