Showing posts with label Philippines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Philippines. Show all posts

Sunday, March 23, 2025

Worse than the hypocrisy of the tobacco industry (donating mobile clinics while causing deaths and diseases) is the lack of integrity of the Secretary of Health attending this event and posing happily for a group photo, trading public health principles and ethics for political convenience, violating CSC-DOH JMC 2010-01. I consider Sec. Ted Herbosa a colleague and mentor, but I do not mince my words when I say he has lost all credibility.

And he wants to represent the Philippines as the president of the next World Health Assembly? Under this Marcos government, the Philippines does NOT deserve to lead the World Health Assembly.

This 3rd Sunday of Lent, let us pray for credible, ethical leadership.

(photo and caption published in the Philippine Daily Inquirer, 23 Mar 2025)


Saturday, December 18, 2021

Reposting our BMJ blog article

https://blogs.bmj.com/tc/2021/12/17/philippine-congress-set-to-reverse-protective-tobacco-control-measures-via-retrogressive-vape-bill/

Philippine Congress set to reverse protective tobacco control measures via retrogressive ‘Vape Bill’

Anna Bueno and Ulysses Dorotheo


New laws often build upon and strengthen existing laws, but in the midst of a pandemic when health-protective measures should be prioritised, retrogressive bills seeking to loosen existing restrictions on heated tobacco products (HTPs) and electronic nicotine/non-nicotine delivery systems (ENDS/ENNDS) have advanced in Philippine Congress, despite firm objections from the country’s health and medical communities led by the Philippine Medical Association, Philippine College of Physicians, and Philippine Pediatric Society, as well as public interest lawyers and youth groups.

In 2019, Philippine Congress amended the National Internal Revenue Code to impose and raise tax rates on HTPs, and ENDS/ENNDS; however, because Republic Act (RA) 11346 and RA 11467 imposed much lower tax rates on HTPs and ENDS/ENNDS than on cigarettes, safeguards to protect public health, particularly youths, were included in these amendments: (a) prohibiting sales to non-smokers and anyone below 21 years of age; (b) restricting flavours to tobacco and plain menthol; (c) mandating the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to regulate the manufacture, importation, sale, packaging, advertising, and distribution of these products; and (d) requiring graphic health warnings (GHW) on packages in line with the GHW Law (RA 10643) that was implemented in 2016 and  prescribes 12 images to be printed on a rotating basis on all product packages.

As a concession to the industry, these provisions will only come into force in May 2022, but instead of preparing to comply with the law, the industry got a court injunction to stop the Department of Health and FDA from implementing regulations on HTP and ENDS/ENNDS and has been aggressively lobbying for a more industry-friendly law to repeal and pre-empt those public health safeguards before they can even be implemented.

In May 2021, the day after the Lower House approved House Bill 9007 on third and final reading despite strong opposition from health advocates in the House, Senator Ralph Recto, a smoker turned vaper and known industry ally, sponsored the Senate version of this pro-industry bill (Senate Bill 2239), which was approved on second reading yesterday, 13 December 2021.

Completely disregarding the existing laws that already set a regulatory regime for these products and the repeated and pointed opposition of medical organizations, these bills seek to make HTPs and ENDS/ENNDS more widely available by lowering the minimum age of access from 21 years to 18 years, allowing sales to non-smokers, allowing online marketing and sales, allowing multiple flavours that are attractive to teens, replacing the FDA with the industry-friendly Department of Trade and Industry as the regulatory agency for these harmful products, and limiting the placement of GHW to a single message on nicotine as an addictive substance. As with cigarette regulation in the Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003 (RA 9211), we are seeing a replay of the industry tactic of agreeing to regulations that favour trade at the expense of public health.

Under the guise of balanced regulation, HB 9007 and SB 2239 proponents claim that regulation of HTPs and ENDS/ENNDS should not be stricter than that for reportedly much more harmful cigarettes, as stipulated in RA 9211. They completely ignore that RA 9211 is outdated and long overdue for amendment because it is non-compliant with the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC) and even violates it by including tobacco industry representatives in public health policymaking. Instead of amending RA 9211 to raise to 21 years the minimum age of access for cigarettes, as proposed by veteran tobacco control champion Sen. Pia Cayetano and recommended by the medical community (to prevent nicotine addiction and harm to the developing adolescent brain) or banning cigarette flavours, vaping proponents have chosen to lower the bar for HTP and ENDS/ENNDS.

As per the 2019 Philippine Global Youth Tobacco Survey, 14.1% of 13-to-15-year-olds are already current ENDS users, compared to 10%, who are current cigarette smokers. In addition, 24.6% have ever tried ENDS, more than double the 11.7% who had ever tried in 2015.

In stark contrast, neighbouring Singapore, whose smoking prevalence dropped to 10.1% in 2020, gradually increased its minimum age from 18 to 21 over the past 3 years, banned HTPs and ENDS as a preventive measure, maintains a comprehensive ban on online tobacco advertising, and enforced standardised tobacco packaging in 2020 under the helm of its Ministry of Health.

On its final reading on 16 December 2021, the bill was approved by a majority vote of the Senate and will now be harmonised with the House version by a Bicameral Committee before being sent to the President for his signature. The only thing that can stop e-cigarette and HTP laws from being relaxed now would be a Presidential veto.

Anna Bueno JD is a writer, researcher, and lawyer at Imagine Law in the Philippines.

Ulysses Dorotheo MD is Executive Director at the Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance (SEATCA).

The quagmire of tobacco control policy in the Philippines

June 2021

 

The quagmire of tobacco control policy in the Philippines

 

[An edited version of this article was published on 13 Dec 2021 by Vera Files as "A corporate cloud over the right to health," and an even more condensed version  was first published on 10 Aug 2021 in the Asia Democracy Chronicles.]


If everyone knows that smoking kills, why are tobacco products still legal and regulated as if they are just like other consumer products? Why aren’t tobacco products and the tobacco industry in the Philippines regulated as strictly as in some other countries? The first US Surgeon General’s Report on Smoking and Health was published in 1964, but 57 years later, why are there still 1 billion tobacco users in the world, of whom 16 million are Filipino adults?

 

The Global Burden of Disease (GBD) Study recently reported in the Lancet that although smoking prevalence had decreased significantly since 1990 among both males (27.5% reduction) and females (37.7% reduction) aged 15 years and older, efforts to curb smoking have been outpaced by population growth with 150 million more smokers in 2019 compared to 1990.

 

The GBD study also showed that 89% of new smokers were addicted by the age of 25, confirming what the tobacco industry has known and exploited for decades and emphasizing the need to focus on preventing youths from becoming addicted, as the adolescent brain is particularly vulnerable to nicotine addiction.

 

Why are governments the world over working overtime to address the COVID-19 pandemic that killed 3.79 million people (including 22,788 Filipinos) in the past 18 months, but tolerating and seemingly neglecting the tobacco pandemic that every year kills 8.2 million people--including about 115,000 Filipinos? 

 

Answers to these questions lie partly in history, particularly from the time that the modern cigarette-rolling machine was invented in 1880, producing 200 cigarettes per minute, as compared to 3 to 5 cigarettes rolled by hand per minute (today’s machines produce 20,000 death sticks per minute). At the start of the 20th century, lung cancer was a rare disease, and medical students were told they might never see another case in their lifetime. Ever growing scales of mass production coupled with aggressive marketing campaigns led to an exponential and widespread increase in smoking and nicotine addiction with a subsequent similarly exponential increase in lung cancers, and it took a few decades for the science of health harms and government regulation to catch up. By the 1960s, smoking prevalence was as high as 50%-70% in the United States and many European countries. Since peaking in the 1960s and 1970s, tobacco use in those countries has declined through tobacco control policies and programs, driven by the evidence of smoking as a leading cause of health harms to both smokers and non-smokers. Faced with shrinking markets in high-income countries, transnational tobacco companies exploited trade liberalization, foreign direct investment, technological innovation, global communications, and other facets of a globalized economy to establish and expand markets in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), which now comprise 80% of all tobacco users and deaths. Incidentally, two-thirds of the world’s smokers live in just 10 countries, including the Philippines; the other countries are  China, India, Indonesia, the United States, Russia, Bangladesh, Japan, Turkey, and Vietnam.

 

Responding to this globalization of the tobacco epidemic, World Health Organization (WHO) member states negotiated and approved the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), which entered into force in 2005. The Philippines is among 182 State Parties to this treaty and is obligated to implement its various provisions. The FCTC provides a clear roadmap, based on scientific evidence and international best practices, to guide countries on how to effectively and continually reduce tobacco use and exposure to tobacco smoke in order “to protect present and future generations from the devastating health, social, environmental and economic consequences of tobacco consumption and exposure to tobacco smoke” (FCTC Article 3). Governments simply have to follow through on their commitments and implement their treaty obligations, but this has always been easier said than done. 

 

Implementation of the FCTC’s lifesaving policies to reduce tobacco use has been varied between and within countries and has focused primarily on reducing the demand for tobacco. For example, taxation is widely recognized as one of the most effective tobacco control policies, but cigarettes are significantly cheaper in LMICs compared to high-income countries. On this point, the Philippines has done fairly well, but as we will discuss later, the success of the 2012 sin tax reform and subsequent tax increases in 2019 were not easily achieved and could have been even more effective if not for industry interference and influence. Other demand reduction measures, such as a ban on tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorship (TAPS), requiring effective health warnings, protecting the public from exposure to tobacco smoke, encouraging tobacco cessation, and public education, have only been partially implemented through Philippine laws and policies; these will be described briefly below. Other demand reduction measures, such as product regulation to reduce tobacco product attractiveness, addictiveness, and toxicity, have not been implemented at all, while supply reduction measures, such as controlling illicit tobacco trade, limiting access by youths, and providing alternative livelihoods for tobacco farmers, are also suboptimal.

 

In their implementation reports to the WHO FCTC Conference of Parties, tobacco industry interference was the most common obstacle identified by Parties; other challenges include limited human and financial resources, a need for better enforcement of legislation, insufficient political support, and weak intersectoral coordination. As with other public health problems, weak health systems are limited by insufficient resources, but unlike viruses and parasites that do not have an industry that promotes the spread of disease (i.e. no malaria industry, just mosquitoes that need to be controlled and eliminated), some public health problems, such as tobacco, alcohol, and unhealthy food, have commercial entities driving them. These are often referred to as negative commercial determinants of health, because of their interference in public health policy development and implementation. This is why, despite knowing what works and what needs to be done, tobacco control progress has been haltingly slow.

 

While the FCTC was being negotiated in Geneva (2000-2003), Philippine Congress, after decades of “indecision,” deliberated and approved Republic Act (RA) 9211 or the Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003. This seemed to be aligned with the FCTC provisions being negotiated, but we now know that RA 9211 contains only some of the FCTC measures and applies them only partially. Yet, the industry claims it is a highly regulated industry! This is how RA 9211 compares with what the FCTC requires:

(1) The national ban on smoking in public places allows for smoking in indoor workplaces and public places, even as health and engineering authorities have declared that there is no safe level of exposure to tobacco smoke and that the only way to protect from secondhand smoke is to enforce 100% smoke-free public places;
(2) The comprehensive ban on TAPS required by the FCTC is shortchanged in RA 9211 by being limited to print, radio, TV, and outdoor billboards, and in addition, RA 9211 allowed for ineffective advertising restrictions before full restrictions on print, radio, and TV ads came into force four and a half years later. RA 9211 also still allows advertising and promotions at points of sale, as well as tobacco company sponsorships disguised as corporate social responsibility (CSR) despite CSR being a well-documented industry tactic to polish the public image of tobacco companies and influence policy makers and the public in order to weaken tobacco regulation;
(3) Bland text-only health warnings were required on the bottom 30% of the front of the tobacco package, an improvement from the illegibly useless text-only warnings printed at that time on one side panel of the pack, but actually a step backward from warnings required by Department of Health (DOH) in 1994 (under then Secretary Juan Flavier) to be placed on the bottom 25% of both front and back of the pack. Unknown to most Filipinos is the fact that the Philippine Tobacco Institute sued the DOH over these 25% text warnings, and in 2001 the case reached the Supreme Court, which ruled in favor of DOH. The 25% warnings were never implemented, however, as they were superseded by RA 9211, which, adding insult to injury, gave the industry 3 whole years to print the warnings on the bottom 30% of the front of the pack. RA 9211 also completely ignored the introduction of graphic (pictorial) health warnings (GHW) in Canada, Brazil, and Venezuela at that time;
(4) Legislators also inserted a “balanced policy” statement that unfairly gives equal weight to both public health protection and ensuring that tobacco industry interests are not adversely compromised, rather than giving priority to public health; and
(5) RA 9211 not only appointed the Department of Trade and Industry, which is pro-industry, as chair of the Inter-agency Committee-Tobacco (IACT) tasked with implementing this law (the DOH is only vice-chair, and not even co-chair, despite the “balanced policy” statement), but it also includes as members of the IACT a representative each of the tobacco industry and the National Tobacco Administration (NTA), despite the NTA having 5 tobacco industry representatives in its governing board. The Department of Agriculture is also an IACT member but is usually also represented by the NTA, thus providing clear over-representation of the tobacco industry. This is not only an obvious case of conflict of interests, where the industry being regulated is allowed to be its own regulator, but it is also a direct violation of FCTC Article 5.3.

 

In hindsight, RA 9211, though a tobacco regulatory milestone, was a pre-emptive strike of the industry against the FCTC as part of its strategy of promoting itself as being “part of the solution”. It is no surprise that the Philippine tobacco industry was described in 2004 as "the strongest tobacco lobby in Asia" and the Philippines as “among the world’s slowest nations to take tobacco control seriously.”

 

Since the ratification and entry into force of the FCTC in 2005, public health advocates have sought repeatedly to strengthen tobacco control and bring the law into compliance with the FCTC, but the industry has consistently fought to defeat any new legislation that might close the loopholes in RA 9211.

 

For example, the FCTC requires Parties to implement effective health warnings within three years of entry into force. For the Philippines, that would have been 2008, by which time GHWs were widely acknowledged as international best practice. Legislative proposals in the 14th and 15th Congresses to replace the ineffective text-only warnings with GHWs were fiercely opposed by the industry—to the extent of providing bribes to congressmen—and failed, despite the fact that cigarette packs with GHWs were being made in the Philippines and exported to Thailand at that time.

 

Faced with this setback, the DOH issued Administrative Order 2010-13, requiring that graphic health information be printed on tobacco packages: 30 percent in front (in addition to the existing 30 percent text-only warnings) and 60 percent at the back. Almost immediately, the tobacco industry challenged the DOH with no less than five separate court cases, which doomed the measure to limbo.

 

It wasn’t until 2014 when the GHW Law was passed, buoyed by the success of the Sin Tax Reform Law of 2012 (RA 10351), another major milestone for Philippine tobacco control that similarly was not achieved without difficulty and compromise. Even then, concessions to the industry included: 50% size instead of 85% (as required in Thailand, then the world’s largest), placement of GHWs in the lower rather than upper portion of principal display surfaces of packages; giving the industry 20 months (instead of 6 months) from publication of the GHW templates for full compliance, and requiring the IACT rather than DOH to monitor compliance.

 

Seemingly unsatisfied with those concessions, the industry tried to weaken the implementing rules and regulations (IRR), such as by arguing for a very narrow interpretation of the law and exclusion of products sold in duty-free stores. Fortunately, those attempts failed, but it took more than a year for the IRR to be finalized due to many instances of tobacco industry interference. Consequently, GHWs did not appear in the market until March 2016.

 

In 2011, again using the litigation tactic, the Philippine Tobacco Institute, representing the industry, challenged the Food and Drug Administration’s (FDA) authority to regulate tobacco products under the FDA Act of 2009 (RA 9711), claiming that the IACT under RA 9211 had sole authority to regulate tobacco products. This case remains pending in the Supreme Court and has prevented the FDA from regulating nicotine, flavors, and other ingredients in tobacco products despite their known negative impacts on health.

 

Even the internationally touted Sin Tax Reform Law of 2012 did not survive the legislative mill unscarred. Various case studies describe the challenges and achievements of the sin tax reform, so we will simply point out that the results of industry interference: final excise tax rates prescribed in the law were lower than initially proposed, although certainly much better than those proposed by the industry (which basically maintained the status quo). In addition, the law provided for a phased simplification of the four tax tiers over five years rather than an immediate shift to a unitary rate for all cigarette brands. Maintaining tax tiers was clearly important to the industry, so much so that, less than 3 months before the unitary rate was set to come into force in January 2017, industry allies in Congress filed HB 4144 to maintain the then two-tier structure. Whereas RA 10351 took more than a year of congressional deliberations (even with full support of the Department of Finance (DOF), DOH, and other government agencies), HB 4144 was approved by the House Ways and Means Committee after only two hearings seven days apart and subsequently approved in plenary eight days later. Fortunately, the Senate did not consider HB 4144 before January 2017, allowing the unitary rate to come into effect as scheduled.

 

Still, the industry continued its efforts to preempt further tax reforms. In December 2017, in the bicameral committee finalizing the Tax Reform for Acceleration and Inclusion (TRAIN) Law (RA 10963), pro-industry legislators inserted a provision (not found in either House or Senate bills) raising the excise tax rate by a marginal PHP 2.50/pack (or 12.5 centavos per stick). A similar tactic was used in 2019 when the Tobacco Tax Law of 2019 (RA 11346) was being deliberated in the Senate. While pro-health senators pushed for tax rates to be increased from PHP 35/pack to a minimum PHP 60/pack to as high as PHP 90/pack, pro-industry senators proposed a last-minute provision to tax heated tobacco products (HTP) and e-liquids at only 22% of the rates for cigarettes, which the DOF and health advocates were forced to accept in order to obtain the higher cigarette tax rate of PHP 45/pack.

 

In this way, the industry was able to legitimize HTPs and electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS, such as e-cigarettes) in the country. Pro-health legislators pushed back by proposing that HTPs and ENDS be required to carry GHWs, and this was approved, but clearly, it was necessary to raise the tax rates on these new products. Later in the 2019, supported by health advocates, the DOF succeeded in pushing for increased excise taxes on HTPs and ENDS (RA 11467), although not to the same level as cigarette taxes; however, RA 11467 also gave the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) the mandate to regulate HTPs and ENDS, prohibited access to  non-smokers and those below 21 years, and prohibited all flavors except plain tobacco and menthol.

 

Unsurprisingly, the industry is aggressively pushing to weaken the current regulatory policy for HTPs and ENDS. In 2019, the industry got a court injunction to stop the DOH and FDA from implementing regulations on HTPs and ENDS. In May 2021, pro-industry legislators succeeded in passing HB 9007 in the Lower House under the guise of regulation, when in reality it promotes the commercial interests of the industry and will make HTPs and ENDS more widely available by lowering the minimum age of access from 21 years to 18 years, allowing online marketing and sales, allowing multiple flavors that are attractive to teens, and replacing the FDA with the industry-friendly DTI as the regulatory agency for these health-harming products. Senator Ralph Recto has also sponsored the Senate version of this pro-industry bill (SB 2239), which is now in the period of interpellation. Escaping all logic, the sponsors of these pro-industry bills maintain that, because HTP and ENDS manufacturers are not making any health claims, these products should be regulated by the DTI rather than the FDA, even while they acknowledge that these products are not harmless to health and assert that these products are “less harmful alternatives to cigarettes” (an obvious health claim).

 

We are now seeing the industry once again spreading misinformation with its claims that it is part of the solution to the tobacco pandemic by offering reportedly less harmful alternatives to cigarettes (like it did with light/mild and low-tar cigarettes) to the point of promoting them as practically harmless products. At the same time, it continues to make and sell billions of cigarettes and continues to oppose more stringent cigarette regulation that would prevent youth uptake and help smokers quit.

 

In a nutshell, the industry is up to its usual tricks, albeit dressed up in shiny new electronic clothes. It is hijacking the political and legislative process, exaggerating its economic importance, manipulating public opinion (including through journalists and columnists) to focus away from the health, socio-economic, and environmental harms it causes, creating and supporting astroturf front groups that focus on “rights” to use the industry’s products, funding biased research in favor of its products while discrediting other research that proves their harmfulness, and intimidating governments with litigation.

 

Tobacco industry interference remains the main reason for the large and persistent gap between knowledge and action on tobacco control in the Philippines. That is not to say that this cannot be overcome and success achieved. We can learn from our own wins, such as the sin tax reform and GHW campaigns, as well as from other countries that are winning against the tobacco pandemic.

 

With the major price hikes resulting from the 2013 implementation of tobacco tax reforms and no other major policy intervention, smoking prevalence dropped from 29.7% in 2009 to 23.8% in 2015 or a relative decline of about 20% in a span of two short years. This was a historical drop in smoking rates that most countries take many more years to achieve, and it clearly shook up the local and transnational tobacco industry, particularly as the Philippine experience provides an excellent example to other countries of the effectiveness of large and fast tobacco tax increases. Of course, these smoking rates are still high and need to be reduced further in order to achieve the global target set by governments of cutting tobacco use by at least 30% by 2025 (relative to 2010).

 

We could also look to Australia, which began enacting tobacco control laws since the early 1990s and was once referred to by the industry as “one of the darkest markets in the world.” In 2019 overall adult smoking prevalence was 12.8%, with majority of daily smokers in their 40s and 50s, while the proportion of adolescents (14-17 years) and young adults (18-24 years), who have never smoked, has grown over time and is currently at 97% and 80% respectively. Within ASEAN, Singapore and Thailand have been tobacco control leaders and are also worth examining. As early as 1970, Singapore began introducing measures to promote a smoke-free lifestyle and in 1986 launched the National Smoking Control Program with the theme, "Towards a Nation of Non-Smokers." The industry has described Singapore as the “world’s most hostile environment,” and in 2020 it had a remarkably low smoking prevalence of 10.1%. [YD1] Thailand actively began implementing tobacco control policies in the late 1980s, which has successfully reduced overall smoking rates from 32% in 1991 to 23% in 2003 to 19% in 2017. Singapore and Thailand were the fourth and fifth countries in the world to implement GHWs in 2004 and 2005, respectively, and are also the first Asian countries to implement standardized (plain) tobacco packaging. The long and rich history of tobacco control in these and other countries holds many lessons for Philippine tobacco control.

 

Beginning with the end in mind is always good advice, and for tobacco control, it is an end to the tobacco pandemic or a future free from tobacco. There is no clear definition of a tobacco-free future, but common elements of a tobacco endgame include a goal of lowering smoking prevalence to as close to zero as possible (some countries have set a goal of less than 5% tobacco use prevalence), phasing out the commercial sale of tobacco, social denormalization of tobacco use, and zero uptake by youths.

 

Finland, also among the world’s tobacco control pioneers since introducing its Tobacco Act in 1976, was the first country in the world to legislate a tobacco endgame; its 2010 Tobacco Act amendment set an explicit objective of ending tobacco use by 2040. In 2016, this objective was extended to include other nicotine products and given an earlier deadline of 2030. Other countries that have set a goal of 5% or less are New Zealand and Ireland (by 2025), Scotland (2034), and Malaysia (2045). Clearly, <5% prevalence is an ambitious long-term goal, but such forward-looking goals provide a clear picture of what still needs to be achieved. Incidentally, Finland has demonstrated that it is possible to reduce smoking prevalence (14% as of 2018) while preventing regular e-cigarette use (1% daily use prevalence). The same can be observed in Brazil, which banned e-cigarettes in 2009 (except if registered as cessation aids) and had a smoking prevalence of 9.3% in 2018. Australia and Singapore also prohibit e-cigarettes unless regulated as cessation devices, but no manufacturer has sought for electronic smoking devices to be classified as such.

 

Towards this endgame goal, countries that have achieved much progress in tobacco control (including Australia, Singapore, Thailand, and Finland) have been guided by clear policies and plans of action that have been evaluated and revised from time to time. Such policies and plans are also comprehensive in their scope rather than taking an ad hoc, opportunistic, and piecemeal approach to the tobacco problem, which has been the approach in the Philippines over the past decade. A comprehensive approach to tobacco control means not only ensuring that a range of effective tobacco control measures are implemented but also situated within the larger public health context of the country. For example, Australia’s then Minister for Health and Ageing established a National Preventative Health Taskforce to develop “a comprehensive and lasting Preventative Health Strategy by mid-2009 to tackle the burden of chronic disease then caused by obesity, tobacco and excessive consumption of alcohol. The taskforce’s formative report “Australia: the healthiest country by 2020” presented the taskforce’s views, based on the best local and international research, on how to achieve this ambitious goal. This report was backed up by three detailed technical reports on obesity, tobacco (Tobacco control in Australia: making smoking history), and alcohol.

 

Among its recommendations to government, the taskforce recommended standardized (plain) packaging, which Australia subsequently legislated and in 2012 implemented. Standardized packaging may be considered a component of an endgame strategy in that it eliminates one of the main (and sometimes last) avenues of industry marketing (the package) and effectively denormalizes tobacco use (promoting cessation, discouraging uptake, and negatively influencing public perception of tobacco).

 

Of course, this was fiercely opposed by the industry both in Australian courts and through international trade and investment disputes, but Australia anticipated and was prepared for these challenges and won. The government not only had robust technical and legal support but also had strong political leadership from all government departments, including finance and trade, and not just the Ministry of Health.

 

This whole-of-government and whole-of-society approach has been identified as an essential mark of initiatives to successfully address the huge and growing burden of non-communicable diseases (NCD), which are primarily driven by tobacco, alcohol, unhealthy diets, and inadequate physical activity. This feature was also manifest in the broad range of social and political actors that contributed to the Philippine sin tax campaigns. Within the context of the 2030 sustainable development agenda, a comprehensive and whole-of-government/society approach also has the potential to accelerate the tobacco endgame, noting in particular that Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3 (ensure health and well-being for all, at every stage of life) includes strengthening the implementation of the WHO FCTC (Target 3a).

 

Such coalition building in tobacco control not only raises public awareness about tobacco harms but also denormalizes tobacco use and marginalizes the tobacco industry, weakening its influence on policy development and implementation. This is why the industry is constantly trying to normalize itself in the eyes of policy makers and the public (repeatedly emphasizing that it is a legal industry selling legal products, regardless of harms caused) and why it builds relationships with non-health (finance, trade, agriculture, labor, social welfare, education, law enforcement, environment, foreign affairs) sectoral partners and government officials. Even in developed countries, where tobacco use and the tobacco industry have been effectively denormalized and demonized, the industry is continuing to portray itself as a relevant stakeholder and “part of the solution” rather than part and parcel of the problem.

 

An excellent example of this is the ongoing industry attack on the Civil Service Commission (CSC) and DOH Joint Memorandum Circular (JMC) 2010-01 on Protecting the Bureaucracy from Tobacco Industry Interference, which requires transparency, accountability, and avoiding conflicts of interest and is based on the FCTC Article 5.3 implementing guidelines. The JMC is an effective obstacle to the industry’s divide-and-conquer and normalization strategy. In addition, it made the Philippines one of the first countries in the world to implement an Article 5.3 policy that has been recognized by other countries as international best practice for countering tobacco industry interference.

 

It is therefore important to continue monitoring, anticipating, and exposing industry interference, while also strengthening existing laws and policies like RA 9211 with a view to accelerating tobacco use cessation and ensuring that adolescents remain nicotine-free until their mid-20s, which will radically reduce youth smoking rates in the future. Such stronger demand reduction measures include prohibiting smoking in all indoor workplaces and public places, prohibiting all forms of tobacco advertising and promotion at point of sale (including online and retail product display), requiring standardized tobacco packaging with much larger GHWs, promoting broad access to smoking cessation services, regular mass media anti-tobacco campaigns. In addition, drastically more attention must be given to supply reduction measures, such as restricting the number and location of tobacco retail outlets, banning flavors (particularly menthol) and cigarette filters, raising the minimum age of access to 25 years, providing alternative livelihoods to tobacco farmers, and implementing a track-and-trace system to secure the tobacco supply chain and eliminate illicit tobacco trade.

 

Empowered by the Local Government Code, local governments can enact FCTC-compliant ordinances, strictly enforce the law, and promote healthy living, e.g. the Tobacco-free Generation (TFG) campaign of Balanga City. Typical of the industry, despite its rhetoric of not wanting youths to smoke, when Balanga passed its TFG ordinance to prevent tobacco sales to anyone born after the year 2000, the city was sued by the Philippine Tobacco Institute.

 

Fortunately, health advocates know that achieving a tobacco-free future is not a sprint but a marathon. Tobacco industry interference is expected, but there will always be people, who believe in truth and social justice, who will fight this good fight, hopeful that in the end, good will triumph over evil. The devastating toll of tobacco on individuals and society, the willful deception of the public by the tobacco industry, and our love for humankind compel us.

 

This article is produced under the Nagbabagang Kuwento (Burning Stories) Tobacco Control Media Program of the Probe Media Foundation Inc. supported by the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

 

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

PMFTC claims losses after tax increase; PMI expects 10% growth in 2013


According to PMI's recent press release on Q2 earnings (http://www.pmi.com/eng/media_center/press_releases/pages/201307180700.aspx):

Despite a decline in volumes in the first half of 2013, PMI's net profits (for Q1+Q2) of $7.9 billion were down by only 2.5%. The company's CEO also predicts that PMI will meet its growth rate target of 10-12% this year: “For the second half of the year, we expect volume/mix to improve, pricing to remain strong and our total cost variance, excluding currency, to be flat. While industry volume remains a challenge, our underlying business performance is such that we continue to expect to meet our mid to long-term currency neutral adjusted diluted EPS growth rate target of 10-12% in 2013.”

"In the Philippines, PMI’s shipment volume of 19.1 billion units decreased by 16.5%, primarily reflecting the unfavorable impact of the disruptive excise tax increase in January 2013, which resulted in a recommended retail selling price increase for premium Marlboro and low-price Fortune of approximately 60% and 70%, respectively. Industry cigarette volume of 23.1 billion units was estimated to have decreased by 7.0%, reflecting a partial, but insufficient, improvement in declared tax-paid volume by local manufacturers and government tax enforcement. PMI’s market share in the quarter decreased by 9.5 points to 82.9%, primarily due to down-trading to competitive brands. Marlboro’s market share decreased by 5.9 points to 14.7%. Share of low-price Fortune decreased by 18.0 points to 32.8%, partly offset by gains from PMI’s other local low-price brands. PMI’s cigarette shipments are estimated to decline by 20-25% for the full-year 2013, as the availability of non-tax paid domestic volume remains a critical issue."

Apparently, PMI is continuing to blame the January excise increase and illicit trade/smuggling ("non-tax paid domestic volume") for its declining market volumes, and denying the fact that smokers are smoking less and/or quitting (in addition to smokers down-trading to cheaper brands).  

The PH Department of Health should try to get new prevalence data as soon as possible to clearly illustrate the positive (dampening) effect of the sin tax increase on consumption.

Given that PMI made huge profits last year (2012) and is expecting further growth this year (2013), let's look at how much money PMI made in 2012 and relate this to how many deaths its products caused in the same year.

In 2012:
- PMI's share of the global market = 16.3%
- Global number of deaths from tobacco in 2012 = 6 million
- PMI's 2012 death toll = 978,000
- PMI's 2012 earnings = $14.2 billion
- PMI's earnings per death = $14,519.00

If at least 87,600 Filipinos are killed by tobacco every year, and PMFTC holds 94% of the market (as of 2012), then PMFTC is accountable for at least 82,344 Filipino deaths.

If we multiply this number by PMI's reported global earnings per death, this means that PMFTC earned $1,195,552,536 or PHP 50.2 billion (USD=PHP42) from tobacco-caused deaths in the PH in 2012.

Now compare this to what the entire tobacco industry in the PH (including PMFTC) paid to the government as excise in 2012: PHP 28.16 billion.

The tobacco industry has no shame.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

MIssion: Smoke-free Philippines

All health-loving Filipinos are encouraged to join the "Mission: Smoke-free Philippines" group on Facebook! Pwede na rin isali ang lahat ng mga kakilala ninyo sa FB.

You may also contact the groups founder, Tony Abundabar, through 0919 826 1895 if you want to do more or provide support. He also has set up a blog at http://missionsmokefree.blogspot.com/.

Magkaisa tayo para sa kalusugan ng lahat. A healthy nation is a wealthy nation.

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Misinformed opinions about tobacco taxes and smuggling

This is my response to an article by Neal Cruz (High cigarette taxes will encourage smuggling, Philippine Daily Inquirer, September 20, 2011)

Ducky Paredes also makes a similarly misinformed opinion in his article (Learning from Singapore, Malaya, May 24, 2011)


Strong international evidence and experience exists to support tobacco tax increases, because they are effective not only in raising government revenues but also in reducing consumption of a harmful product, especially among vulnerable sectors such as the young and the poor. This is why parties to the WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC), the Philippines among them, are obligated to implement tax policies and, where appropriate, price policies, on tobacco products so as to contribute to national health objectives aimed at reducing tobacco consumption.

The tobacco industry often argues that smuggling will increase with any tax increase. The international evidence however shows that tobacco smuggling is generally higher in low-income countries where taxes and prices are low, while smuggling is low in high-income countries where tobacco taxes and prices are high. This correlates well with the levels of anti-smuggling enforcement and corruption in each country. While a price differential across borders provides an incentive for smuggling, it is the laxity of anti-smuggling measures and the propensity for corruption that facilitates the actual smuggling. Conversely, if there is very tough anti-smuggling enforcement with stiff penalties, this is a strong disincentive that discourages smuggling.

"Long and porous borders" are also cited by the tobacco industry as an argument against raising taxes because it is "impossible" to defend these borders against smugglers.  Aside from being an obvious insult to our customs and border patrol officials, this argument also rings hollow. There are many countries with long and porous borders that have strong anti-smuggling measures in place, and which have high tobacco taxes and prices, such as the UK, Japan, and Australia.

Singapore

Neal Cruz is mistaken regarding smoking prevalence in Singapore, which he says was unchanged from 2001 to 2007. Based on a 2010 ERC report (an industry-oriented publication), per capita cigarette consumption dropped steadily from just under 1,200 sticks in 1990 to under 400 sticks in 2006. This is in consonance with the declining adult smoking prevalence rate which dropped from 18.3% in 1992 to 15.2% in 1998 to 12.6% in 2004, and which correlates well with the regular tax increases during the same period, averaging a 4% price increase per year. Additionally, Singapore has banned all tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorship and promoted smoke-free public places since the 1970s and also began implementing pictorial health warnings in 2004.  

Contrary to what the industry is claiming, Singapore has been able to successfully curb cigarette smuggling and keep its incidence low. In 2007 and 2008, according to a Singapore Customs Media Release in 2008, around 4.4% of cigarettes were smuggled, but this was significantly reduced in 2009 to around 2.37% (Singapore Customs Enforcement Data 2010). This can be attributed to Singapore’s integrated and multi-pronged-government tobacco control strategy that includes not only demand reduction measures (less people smoking), but also supply reduction measures such as strengthening customs enforcement, which subsequently saw an increased number of arrests and seizures for cigarette smuggling.  It is this increased anti-smuggling effort that has resulted in increased seizure volumes, not that there has been an increase in smuggling.

Unfortunately, there has been no tobacco tax increase in Singapore since 2005, and given Singapore's economic growth, this has made cigarettes more affordable and contributed to the slowly increasing per capita consumption seen from 2006 to 2009 (also ERC data) and the increase in adult smoking prevalence from 12.6% in 2004 to 13.6% in 2007.  Tobacco industry puppets attribute this to cheap smuggled cigarettes, but the truth is that it is primarily driven by increasing affordability of legal cigarettes due to the stagnation of tobacco excise tax rates since 2005.

Malaysia

According to the ERC 2010 data, contrary to what Neal Cruz claims (that smoking incidence was virtually unchanged), per capita cigarette consumption also declined steadily in Malaysia from around 1,100 sticks in 1990 to under 700 sticks in 2009.  It was the repeated tax increases over the years that drove this decline, as well as a ban on all tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorship in the past decade and the government’s “Tak Nak” media campaign. In 2009, Malaysia also started requiring pictorial health warnings on all cigarette packs.

The Confederation of Malaysian Tobacco Manufacturers (CMTM), which is actually three transnational tobacco companies (British American Tobacco, Philip Morris International, and Japan Tobacco International) that control 97% of the local market, is the one claiming that smuggling accounts for close to 40% of the local market. Given that 97% of the market is controlled by these 3 large companies, primarily BAT Malaysia, and given that most of the smuggled brands are reported by them as not being their company brands, it seems unrealistic to believe that 4 out of 10 cigarette packs sold in Malaysia are illegal.

New York City

Over the past decade, New York City has prohibited smoking in virtually all indoor workplaces, including bars and restaurants; raised excise taxes; and launched a number of hard-hitting anti-tobacco media campaigns to significantly raise public awareness.  The results? Prior to 2002, the prevalence of smoking among adults had remained steady at about 22% for a decade. But between 2002 and 2010, that number dropped to 14%, resulting in more than 400,000 fewer adult smokers in New York City. Furthermore, between 2001 and 2009, smoking prevalence among students aged 14-18 years dropped from 18% to 8%.  Contrary to the doomsayers’ predictions about the economic calamity that would come with strong tobacco policies, New York City’s economy has been unaffected. And with consumer demand being that low, how does that fit with the tobacco industry’s claims that cigarette smuggling is rising in leaps and bounds?

Australia

It is surprising that Neal Cruz recommends Australia as a best model for the Philippines to follow, because, similar to claims in Malaysia, the tobacco industry (led by BAT Australia) is claiming that 1 out of 6 cigarettes sold there is illicit.  Can any reasonable person imagine this happening?  If it is so rampant, this would mean that 1 out of six smokers knows where to obtain these illegal cigarettes, and wouldn’t the government authorities be aware of this as well?

The facts around tobacco tax increases being pegged to the CPI are also not exactly as they have been presented.  The truth is that prior to a 25% tax increase in 2010, Australia had not raised tobacco excise in real terms since 1999.  The tax increases in nominal terms that resulted from tax rates being in line with the CPI may have increased government revenues, but they certainly did not produce the decline in smoking rates that were expected. There were still around 15,000 Australians dying each year from tobacco-related diseases.  Hence, the government raised taxes by 25% in 2010, at the same time announcing that there would also be significant tax increases in 2011 and 2012. In the same effort, the Australian government also announced that it would require the world’s first plain packaging of tobacco products beginning in 2012.

Finally

The Philippines does need an equivalent of the Australian excise tax system, which is indexed to inflation but also significantly raises prices so as to effectively discourage consumption of a harmful product that causes so much preventable disease, disability, and death, as well as suffering, among Filipinos.

For a discussion of cigarette affordability and the needed tobacco tax reforms needed to correct the flaws current excise system, please read the policy paper here: http://seatca.org/dmdocuments/SITT%20Philippines%20Affordability%20Policy%20Paper_Final.pdf

A more comprehensive discussion of these tax reforms can be found in the monograph “Taxing Health Risks” by the UP College of Law and HealthJustice (http://seatca.org/dmdocuments/Taxing%20Health%20Risks%20Philippines%202010.pdf)

The key message here is to keep raising taxes and prices so that consumption starts to decline and so that the government revenues from such tax increases can be used for tobacco control (including smuggling control), health promotion, universal health care, social development, and a host of other socially beneficial programs.

And of course, don’t believe the tobacco industry’s misrepresentation of the facts.

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