Western Leader

Quitting turns ash into cash

- ROB STOCK

OPINION: Last year I met the global spin-doctor of Imperial Tobacco.

It was rather thrilling. He might just be the most polished talker I ever met.

If there was a world championsh­ip for spin, he’d be a contender for the gold medal.

I told him I didn’t hear the world Imperial used much any more, but that it was quite appropriat­e for his company considerin­g the impact its cigarettes have on Maori.

He was unruffled by the comment. I got the feeling it would take a lot to ruffle him.

I suspect my feelings about banning cigarettes entirely might.

As a country we are within touching distance of being able to outlaw the old death sticks.

We have a target of being smokefree by 2025, and with a bit of political bravery, we could be.

The Maori Party were the inspiratio­n for the target, and not surprising­ly, given the disproport­ionate number of

GOLDEN RULES

❚ Give up cigarettes

❚ Invest the money saved ❚ Get richer, and get fitter

Maori who smoke.

I’m not usually a banning sort of man. I’m pretty tolerant of other people’s choices, but cigarettes aren’t really a choice thing. They’re an addiction thing, and as an ex-smoker I know about addiction.

Addiction makes you a liar, to yourself, to others. Anyone who says they wouldn’t like to give up cigarette smoking is lying.

But now we have e-cigarettes which deliver nicotine without the harmful smoke. Once they are legalised next year (oh, so slow!), I reckon a health minister really committed to saving lives would give cigarettes until January 1, 2025, and after that they’d be illegal.

History would remember that minister as a global legend, like Irish health minister Michael Martin, whose pub smoking ban was a world-first.

Sure, there’d be a legal battle. Tobacco companies would sue under our trade and investment treaties. But those treaties allow us to take measures to protect public health.

‘‘I never touched another cigarette. Instead, I got fit and I got richer.’’

Uruguay (population 3.5 million) proved that by fighting off Philip Morris’ attempts to stop it bringing in plain packaging.

I gave up ciggies when I came back to New Zealand around 15 years ago after leaving London.

I got off the plane and never touched another cigarette. Instead, I got fit, and I got richer.

A month ago the Government unveiled ambitious targets for improving Maori incomes.

It could double down by banning cigarettes.

I know. Some of you are thinking I’m a meddling dogooder who’ll be after your soft drinks, fatty pies and booze next.

You have an arguable point. I am arguing for a limited beneficial meddling in people’s ‘‘choices’’, so guilty as charged, though I’d die in a ditch in defence of my right to a reasonably-priced beer, and your right to eat sweeties and fatty liferuinin­g takeaways.

But just imagine if all the smokers saved an annual fortune by switching to vaping.

In many cases that’d be a couple of thousand apiece to stick into KiwiSaver every year, but you can calculate your own savings on the Quitline website.

And the Government sticks in up to $521.43 a year when you save into KiwiSaver.

That’s a hell of an additional return on quitting.

Come retirement, former smokers would all be laughing, as opposed to coughing.

 ?? PHOTO: 123RF ?? Quitting - up there as a financial red-letter day alongside buying your first place, and clearing the mortgage.
PHOTO: 123RF Quitting - up there as a financial red-letter day alongside buying your first place, and clearing the mortgage.
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