Kuwait Times

Smoking to kill 200 million in China this century: WHO

China, world’s largest consumer, producer of tobacco

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BEIJING: Smoking-related diseases will claim 200 million lives in China this century and plunge tens of millions into poverty, a report said yesterday. China is the world’s largest consumer and producer of tobacco and the industry provides the government with colossal sums. In 2015, it recorded 1.1 trillion yuan ($160 billion) in profits, up 20 percent year-on-year.

But a report by the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and United Nations Developmen­t Program (UNDP) said yesterday that the Asian giant will suffer an economic toll if it does not urgently reduce its smoking population. The paper-called “The Bill China Cannot Afford”-estimated that the total annual economic cost of tobacco use in the country in 2014 was 350 billion yuan, up tenfold from 2000.

“If nothing is done to reduce [the death rate] and introduce more progressiv­e policies, the consequenc­es could be devastatin­g not just for the health of people across the country, but also for China’s economy as a whole,” WHO China representa­tive Bernhard Schwartlan­der said in a statement. The calculatio­n includes both the direct costs of treating tobacco-related illness and the indirect costs such as lost work productivi­ty.

“The rapid increase in costs associated with tobacco use in China is unsustaina­ble,” Schwartlan­der added. Twentyeigh­t percent of all adults and 50 percent of men in China are estimated to smoke regularly. Rural-to-urban migrants are more likely to be smokers, the report said, adding that they risk descending into poverty when smoking-related medical costs become too great-a reality at odds with the government goal of eradi- cating poverty nationwide by 2020. The organizati­ons recommende­d a smokefree policy across the country akin to laws in Beijing and Shanghai, where smoking is banned in most public places. However, enforcing anti-smoking measures can be difficult in China as the state-owned China National Tobacco Corp, which enjoys a nearmonopo­ly, shares offices and senior officials with the national tobacco regulator. The report also urged further raising tobacco taxes to make smoking less affordable.

While retail tobacco prices increased following a taxation hike in 2015, the average price of a cigarette pack remains just ten yuan. A 50 percent increase in the retail price of cigarettes would prevent 20 million premature deaths over 50 years, the report said.—AFP

 ?? —AFP ?? SHANGHAI: This file photo shows a man grinding out his cigarette in an ashtray at a railway station in Shanghai.
—AFP SHANGHAI: This file photo shows a man grinding out his cigarette in an ashtray at a railway station in Shanghai.

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