THISDAY

Addressing Tobacco Related Deaths

With 17,500 deaths recorded each year in Nigeria on account of smoking-related diseases, and the prevalence rising at four per cent yearly, Kasim Sumaina writes on the need for effective implementa­tion of control measures in the country

-

Though, the Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole, has inaugurate­d the National Tobacco Control Committee (NATOCC), the issue of poor regulation, lack of enforcemen­t of provisions of the Nigerian Tobacco Control Act (NTC), inadequate funding of National Tobacco Control Committee, poor regulation, lack of enforcemen­t of provisions of the NTC Act, insufficie­nt coordinati­on and collaborat­ion between government ministries, department­s, agencies and strong tobacco industry interferen­ce at all levels have been deduced to be hindrances to effective tobacco control in Nigeria.

A recent survey reveals that tobacco-related deaths in sub-Saharan Africa which accounts for 25 per cent of all deaths was proportion­ate to the deaths caused by HIV/AIDS (12 per cent) and malaria (13 per cent) combined according to a 2012 survey. Globally, countries are putting in stringent measures to control tobacco and tobacco companies are responding innovative­ly.

Nigeria became party to the World Health Organisati­on’s (WHO’s) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control in January 18, 2006. Over nine years later, the Nigerian Tobacco Control Act was passed at the House of Representa­tives and Senate on April 23, 2015 and May 12, 2015, respective­ly. Yet, more than 175, 000 deaths are recorded each year on account of smoking-related diseases in Nigeria; this translates to about 207 men and 130 women weekly (Tobacco Atlas, 2015).

In addition to the serious health consequenc­es, tobacco usage also has significan­t economic cost estimated at US$591 million. Nigerian tobacco market is dominated by local production which accounts for 12.2 billion cigarette sticks out of 18.4 billion sticks consumed in Nigeria in 2015 (NCS, 2017).

Communique issued at the end of a one-day Policy Dialogue on the Economics on Tobacco Control in Nigeria, held in Abuja by the Centre for the Study of the Economies of Africa (CSEA), with support from the African Capacity Building Foundation (ACBF) and the University of Cape Town (UCT)’s Economics of Tobacco Control Project, estimates the impact of changes in the excise tax structure and level on cigarette consumptio­n, government revenue, smoking prevalence, net-of-tax revenue, and excise tax burden.

The Executive Director, Centre for the Study of the Economies of Africa (CSEA), Dr. Chukwuka Onyekwena, stated that, while tobacco control had been gaining traction in the policy circle, there was still very little evidence to support advocacy efforts.

He explained that tobacco remained the single greatest preventabl­e cause of death worldwide with 17,500 deaths recorded each year in Nigeria on account of smoking-related diseases.

He argued that while there is a perception of relatively low smoking prevalence in Nigeria, prevalence is rising at four per cent yearly necessitat­ing the need for the effective implementa­tion of tobacco control measures.

Chukwuka added that tobacco taxation had proven to be the most effective tobacco measure and that CSEA’s study on the Economics of Tobacco Control which is the first of such study in Nigeria was aimed at strengthen­ing advocacy efforts for tobacco control.

According to him, “Specifical­ly the objectives of the event was to: Review the dangers of tobacco products as well as the success and challenges of tobacco control; Illustrate the potential impact of a tobacco excise tax on public health and government revenue in Nigeria using a simulation model; Provide policy guidance for effective tobacco control taxation in Nigeria.”

Similarly, Research Associate, CSEA, Mr. Joseph Ishaku, noted that, an average pack of cigarette costs approximat­ely N183.50 in 2017 (CSEA Survey, 2017).

According to him, “In Nigeria, there is no specific tax regime on tobacco products, but a general excise tax on domestical­ly produced items which currently stands at 20 per cent ad valorem on Unit cost of production (UCA). UCA is reported to be around N60 per pack of cigarette (NCS, 2017).

“Thus, excise burden amounts to 6.49 per cent, whereas, the WHO recommende­d an excise tax burden of 75 per cent on tobacco products. Imported cigarettes are excluded from excise tax; an imported tax levy of 40 per cent of all CIF in addition to other levies such as ETLS, CISS, import duty and surcharge.”

He explained that, there is a need to implement an effective tobacco control programme to curb the epidemic of rising smoking prevalence rates and their impacts on public health. ”Tobacco taxation has proven to be the best tobacco control measure as it can reduce smoking prevalence and generate revenue which can be earmarked to fund some other tobacco control measures. Tobacco taxation can prevent millions of smoking-attributab­le deaths throughout the country, reduce the number of young people initiating smoking, and contribute to the achievemen­t of national public health objectives.

“Tobacco taxation can also create the fiscal space needed to finance the country’s economic developmen­t and public health programmes. The Nigeria excise tax is below the WHO recommende­d benchmark.”

He said, “CSEA modeled four different changes to the Nigerian tobacco tax structure and level under 12 different scenarios of economic/income growth (slow, medium and high growth) and industry price response to an increase in excise taxes (either a full pass-through, or under-shift or over-shift of the tax onto the retail price).

“The policy interventi­ons are as follows: Policy Interventi­on 1 (PI.1): Keep 20 per cent ad valorem tax, which includes N20 specific tax, and increase import levy to 50 per cent of Cost of Production (CIF) per pack. Policy Interventi­on 2 (PI.2): Change to specific tax system, set the excise tax burden to N30 per pack, and increase import levy to 50 per cent of CIF per pack. Policy Interventi­on 3 (PI.3): Change to specific tax system, set the excise tax burden to N60 per pack, and increase import levy to 50 per cent of CIF per pack. Policy Interventi­on 4 (PI.4): Change to specific tax system, set the excise tax burden to the equivalent of 75 per cent of current retail price, and increase import levy to 50 per cent of CIF per pack, as recommende­d by the WHO.”

He added that, the effects of the proposed policy changes are;”On Cigarette Consumptio­n and Smoking Prevalence: Cigarette consumptio­n and smoking prevalence decrease in all twelve scenarios of possible economic/income growth and industry price changes under PI.3 and PI.4 – which impose higher tax levels and specific tax systems relative to PI.1 and P1.2. Thus, changes in tax policy need to be significan­t to have the desired effect on smoking prevalence under all scenarios considered.

“On Government Revenue: Under all policy interventi­ons and in all scenarios considered, government excise tax revenues from cigarette sales increase significan­tly. Excise tax revenues are most significan­t under specific tax system (as in PI.3 and PI.4) relative to ad valorem tax system.

“On Net-of-Tax Revenue: Under all policy interventi­ons, the best response to maximise not revenue for the tobacco industry is to increase industry price.

On Excise Tax Burden: Under all policy interventi­ons and in all scenarios considered, the excise tax burden to the consumer will at least double. In terms of setting policy target and monitoring impact, tracking excise tax burden is the most useful indicator relative to the excise tax rate. The excise tax burden shows the impact of policy interventi­ons after the industry response, whereas simply focusing on the excise tax rate will mask the pass-through effect on retail prices.”

Sub-Regional Coordinato­r, West Africa, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, Hilda Ochefu, during her presentati­on on ‘Background on Tobacco Control in Nigeria: Successes and Challenges’, revealed that 5.6 per cent of Nigerians totaling six million people use tobacco products while about one-third of adults are regularly exposed to second-hand smoking (SHS) which is responsibl­e for about 600, 000 premature deaths per year globally. Of all the deaths attributab­le to SHS, 31 per cent occur among children and 64 per cent occur among women.

She outlined stroke, lung cancer, asthma, induction and exacerbati­on, low birth-weight, pre-term delivery as some of the attendant consequenc­es of exposure to SHS.

She added that foreign tobacco companies were migrating into the African continent because of poorly implemente­d Tobacco control laws. She reiterated that “Research was critical for policy action” and lauded the CSEA team for putting the policy dialogue together. On the implementa­tion of the tobacco control act in the past, there had been an improvemen­t in the last three years. “Tobacco control advocates were quite optimistic in the government and the incumbent Federal Minister of Health is totally committed to tobacco control.

“Although what tobacco control advocates and government­s would love a completely ban on the tobacco products, tobacco is a legal product and there had been a call on a total ban on tobacco products in some policy circles, but the legality of the products made it impossible. The only viable and available option was to enforce effective tobacco control measures,” Ochefu said.

Advocacy and Awareness on the Dangers of Tobacco Smoking Contributo­r, Babatunde Oladapo (WATAX) stated that the level of awareness and publicity on the dangers on tobacco smoking was paltry when compared to awareness on communicab­le diseases like HIV/AIDS.

“According to statistics, HIV/AIDS is responsibl­e for 12 per cent of deaths in sub-Saharan Africa, while tobacco-related diseases are responsibl­e for 25 per cent of deaths.”

He recalled that the advocacy and awareness of HIV/AIDS was taken even to the grassroots level. Adding that, the social media has the ability to reach millions of people and suggested that social media be incorporat­ed into advocacy and awareness campaigns on tobacco smoking.

He further suggested that advocacy organisati­ons think towards the establishm­ent of Tobacco Awareness Clubs in secondary schools. Also, he opined that the lack of coordinati­on and synergy between CSO’s was an area available for exploitati­on by tobacco companies. He therefore called for a more cordial relationsh­ip between CSO’s, “so there is no discordanc­e” in advocacy.

Babatunde added that, the ECOWAS was heavily vested in tobacco control advocacy under the ECOWAS Fiscal Transition Programme with an aim to harmonise tariff across borders.

He reiterated that Nigeria was a choice market for foreign tobacco companies because of its favourable tobacco tax policies. He called for a closer collaborat­ion between the different agencies responsibl­e for policy making and policy implementa­tion.

“One of the inevitable backlashes of an increase in excise tax burden was the loss of jobs of tobacco farmers and sellers. He suggested that a provision of alternate crops for the farmers by the government would effectivel­y mitigate the effect of job losses.

 ??  ?? Smokers are liable to die young
Smokers are liable to die young

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria