China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Tobacco lobby holding back smoking ban

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OnWednesda­y, Shanghai becomes the latest municipali­ty in China, following Beijing and Shenzhen, to launch a 100 percent smoke-free policy in public places and work spaces. Some 60 million people— more than the population of many countries— living in these cities can now enjoy smoke-free public places.

While we congratula­te Shanghai on joining Beijing and Shenzhen as global leaders in tobacco control, we must also ask: Howis it that only three cities in China have adopted comprehens­ive smoke-free policies? What is standing in the way of the rest of the 1.3 billion citizens having the right to smoke-free indoor air in their workplaces and factories, and in restaurant­s and shopping areas?

President Xi Jinping has announced his vision for China’s future. First, he announced the Chinese Dream; then he called for the Chinese economy to reinvent itself, led by industrial innovation; and last summer, he announced hisHealth China 2030 initiative, a bold declaratio­n that made public health a preconditi­on for all future economic and social developmen­t.

As evidenced in this remarkable series of policy announceme­nts, Xi’s vision for China is one in which economic growth enhances, rather than sacrifices, individual well-being.

Unfortunat­ely, there remains a glaring obstacle to realizing the Chinese Dream and Healthy China 2030 vision — an obstacle which has resisted the considerab­le efforts of China’s public health authoritie­s, advocates and citizens: the tobacco economy.

Tobacco represents an economy of the past. China’s tobacco companies do not fit the vision of an economy driven by innovative, value-added manufactur­ing and a strong service sector. Its very reliance on Chinese smokers undermines efforts to build a healthy China by 2030.

We celebrate the smokefree laws in Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen. But they are among the wealthiest cities in China, which raises the question of inequality. Smoke-free indoor air should not be a luxury for the wealthy, rather an entitlemen­t for all Chinese citizens who are working hard to realize the Chinese Dream.

Why is this not happening? The reason is largely because of the short-sighted economic interests that are not aligned with the President’s vision.

The small but successful tobacco tax adopted in 2015, which reduced smoking and increased government revenues, should be drasticall­y increased so that the tobacco companies pay more tax and farmers start growing alternativ­e crops.

Instead, there is continued resistance to further tobacco taxes and stronger advertisin­g restrictio­ns. Most concerning is that progress has all but stopped on a national smoke-free law.

To those who doubt whether rural government­s are capable of implementi­ng a comprehens­ive smoke-free law, I would point to the hundreds of millions of people China pulled out of poverty in three decades— a much tougher implementa­tion challenge, achieved through strong government leadership and coordinate­d action at all levels.

Xi’s vision for China’s future is clear. The country’s leadership should pass comprehens­ive legislatio­n against tobacco to ensure all Chinese citizens, not just those in the wealthiest cities, can breathe smoke-free air indoors.

Local leaders like those in Shanghai are taking bold decisions to ensure the health of citizens. And even in the absence of national legislatio­n, they are breathing newlife into the Chinese Dream to makeXi’sHealthy China 2030 vision a reality and relegate the tobacco economy to a place it deserves— in the past. The author isWHOrepre­sentative in China.

 ?? SHI YU / CHINA DAILY ??
SHI YU / CHINA DAILY

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