Millennium Post

PAK SUPPORTS PEACE AND RECONCILIA­TION IN AFGHANISTA­N: IMRAN TO US SPECIAL ENVOY

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ISLAMABAD: Pakistan will soon impose a 'sin tax' on cigarettes and sugary beverages and that fund would be diverted to the health budget, Minister for National Health Services Aamer Mehmood Kiani has said.

Speaking at a public health conference at the Health Services Academy, Kiani Tuesday said that the Pakistan Tehreeke-insaf (PTI) government was committed to increasing the health budget by five per cent of GDP, Dawn reported.

"Various routes will be used to increase the health budget," he said, adding "and one of them is imposing a sin tax on tobacco products and sugary beverages. That sum will be diverted to the health budget."

Currently, the government spends a mere 0.6 per cent of GDP on health.

It has been suggested several times in the past that sin taxes be imposed on products that cause health-related issues as a result of which the state pays heavy penalties in the shape of healthcare spending and lowered human productivi­ty, the paper said. Quoting the director general of the NHS Ministry, Dr Asad Hafeez, the paper said that tax on tobacco and sugary beverages was being charged in some 45 countries.

"A sin tax is an internatio­nally recognised term and is specifical­ly levied on certain goods deemed harmful to society, for example tobacco, candies, soft drinks, fast foods, coffee and sugar," he said.

"The US charges about USD 1.5 (approximat­ely Rs 200) per pack of cigarettes, while the UK charges 40 pence (around Rs 100) per litre of sugary beverages as sin tax. Thailand, as well as a number of other countries, has similar taxes that are earmarked for healthcare services," he added.

"We have not yet decided on the exact amount for a sin tax (in Pakistan)," he said, but hinted that "it will certainly be a handsome amount."

"Some 1,500 youngsters start smoking in Pakistan every day, and we want to reduce that number," he said.

The general secretary of the Pakistan National Heart Associatio­n (PANAH), Sanaullah Ghumman, said that his associatio­n had for many years been demanding the imposition of a sin tax. "Recently, during a meeting with President Dr Arif Alvi, we again raised the issue of such a tax," he said. "The minister for health was also present at the meeting, and the president assured us that he would do what was possible," he added.

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