Yorkshire Post

£11bn a year could be freed up by quitting smoking, study suggests

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ALMOST £11bn per year could be freed up and spent in England’s communitie­s if people quit smoking, according to new research by Yorkshire academics.

The study, from experts at the University of Sheffield, found poorer regions of the country could get the most benefit from money saved on tobacco.

A team from the university’s addictions research group looked at how much people spend on cigarettes and tobacco each year and how this money could be spent instead in towns, cities and villages.

They found that £10.9bn – made up of spending on tobacco minus the amount kept by local retailers as profit (seven per cent) – could be reinvested in local shops, services and on entertainm­ent.

Study author Dr Damon Morris said the money currently leaving local communitie­s is taken by the tobacco industry as profit or by the Government in tax.

“This is money that people can instead spend on other things such as in shops, on entertainm­ent or other services,” he said.

He added: “The total economic benefit of going completely smokefree would be greater than £10.9bn.”

It comes after the Tobacco and Vapes Bill was introduced to Parliament, which will restrict the sale of tobacco so that anyone turning 15 this year, or younger, will never legally be sold cigarettes.

It will effectivel­y raise the age of tobacco sales by one year every year, with the aim of stopping today’s youngsters from ever taking up smoking in the first place.

If the Bill passes, Ministers say smoking rates among those aged 1430 could be near zero by 2040.

The new study, published in the journal Tobacco Control, included data from the Smoking Toolkit Study, made up of 18,721 smoking adults who estimated how much they spent on smoking. This was compared with figures from Government tax receipts and national estimates of illegal tobacco use.

It concluded: “The total dividend in England is estimated to be £10.9bn each year, which equates to £1,776 per person who smokes or £246 per adult regardless of smoking status.”

Dr Duncan Gillespie, senior research fellow at the University of Sheffield’s school of medicine and population health, said: “By reducing smoking rates and freeing up disposable income, policymake­rs have the opportunit­y to alleviate smoking-induced deprivatio­n and empower individual­s to redirect funds towards essential needs.

“This reallocati­on of resources can contribute to economic prosperity and help to reduce geographic inequaliti­es in society.”

Government figures suggest smoking costs the UK around £17bn a year, including £10bn every year through lost productivi­ty.

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