Smoking Statistics

By imposing taxes do you think smoking with young people 15 - 24 is

  • Increasing

    Votes: 2 22.2%
  • Decreasing

    Votes: 2 22.2%
  • Don't know

    Votes: 5 55.6%

  • Total voters
    9

Retired_Can_Soldier

The End of the Dog is Coming!
Mar 19, 2006
12,439
1,394
113
60
Alberta
I did a bit of perusing today on the net and was going to throw up some statistics on whether smoking with young people is really on the decline thanks to Tax increases, but there is so much contradictory information out there I thought I would just throw it up to discussion.

I quit smoking over a decade ago. I didn't do it because of cost or taxes, I did it because my chest was starting to hurt and I felt crummy all the time. My wife quit about a year later and neither of us have smoked since. Our kids are another story. All three of my boys started smoking. Most of them started the same way I did. Smoking socially at parties and it just evolved from there.

The politicians like to claim that they are winning the battle against smoking, by imposing heavy taxes on smokers and targeting tobacco companies.

I see a lot of young people out there smoking and they are not buying their cigarettes from the local store, but purchasing cheaper native cigarettes. When Jean Chretien came to power he rolled back the taxes on cigarettes because smuggling was out of control and they were spending way too many resources on trying to battle it.

Since that time they have managed to regain the tax and American Partners now do the same, so smuggling cigarettes is no longer the lucrative business it once was. Now the prohibition on cigarettes has created an underground economy in which manufacturing of the product is far more lucrative.

I really question the statistics the government is keeping on the smoking rate between 15 - 24 and think it is pretty subjective.

Yesterday I heard two of the former Mayors of Vancouver on the radio arguing how they were going to quell smoking marijuana and by legalizing, regulating and taxing the piss out of it. Sounds like there will be another dual underground economy created to me.

Anyone else want to chime in.
 

#juan

Hall of Fame Member
Aug 30, 2005
18,326
119
63
RCS 4 of my siblings have been lost to smoking. I quit smoking over twenty years ago........about ten years before
my first heart attack. I started smoking at fifteen years of age and at that time cigarettes were still relatively cheap
if you ignored the health cost. I think I quit smoking mostly because I was no longer enjoying it. I still remember that
wonderful first cigarette in the morning with a cup of coffee.......obviously something created by the devil....:roll::smile:
 

Tonington

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 27, 2006
15,441
150
63
I really question the statistics the government is keeping on the smoking rate between 15 - 24 and think it is pretty subjective.

Assuming that someone could quantify the actual rate of smoking for people aged 15-24, how do you think it would differ from the available statistics, or maybe you could explain what you feel would be a more objective estimate compared to the stats available right now.

High taxes have been found to lower consumption, even for addictive products like tobacco. Sure, some people will turn to contraband products, but it's not a perfect trade-off. It's not like buying gas down the street from a station with lower prices.

Nova Scotia has had a large decrease in tobacco consumption for the younger demographics. It's been attributed to a number of policies, including higher taxes. Again it's hard to precisely estimate the impact of individual policies, but it's a finding that has been pretty robust, considering the many different jurisdictions where this finding has held up.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
29,798
11,124
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
....I really question the statistics the government is keeping on the smoking rate between 15 - 24 and think it is pretty subjective.

Yesterday I heard two of the former Mayors of Vancouver on the radio arguing how they were going to quell smoking marijuana and by legalizing, regulating and taxing the piss out of it. Sounds like there will be another dual underground economy created to me.

Anyone else want to chime in.


....There already is a vast underground economy with marijuana, already in place, before
it might become legalized, regulated and taxed. Sounds like that battle is lost before it
has begun. As far as try'n to regulate that underground economy if marijuana is legalized,
how's regulating it currently working out so far?
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
63
Ontario
High taxes have been found to lower consumption, even for addictive products like tobacco. Sure, some people will turn to contraband products, but it's not a perfect trade-off. It's not like buying gas down the street from a station with lower prices.
I agree, it isn't like price hopping from one gas bar to another.

Name brand cigarettes purchased by the carton at your local convenience store, $60. Even for low end name brands.

A carton of name brand cigarettes from a First Nations outlet, $40. $30, for similar First Nations brands. And $15 to $20 for generics, of low inconsistent quality.
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

The End of the Dog is Coming!
Mar 19, 2006
12,439
1,394
113
60
Alberta
Assuming that someone could quantify the actual rate of smoking for people aged 15-24, how do you think it would differ from the available statistics, or maybe you could explain what you feel would be a more objective estimate compared to the stats available right now.

Well I guess it depends on how the government is gathering those statistics. If it is based in any way on cigarette tax collection it's not exactly a honest statistic. For lack of a better word. :)

I don't know what would be more objective, I just question whether the present system is as effective as the politicians would have us believe.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
29,798
11,124
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
As far as smoking goes (with the currently legal & heavily taxed stuff) with the 24 & under
crowd....the best deterrent is educating the 25-the grave aged people who (smokers or
not) can talk honestly with the younger ones.
 

Retired_Can_Soldier

The End of the Dog is Coming!
Mar 19, 2006
12,439
1,394
113
60
Alberta
....There already is a vast underground economy with marijuana, already in place, before
it might become legalized, regulated and taxed. Sounds like that battle is lost before it
has begun. As far as try'n to regulate that underground economy if marijuana is legalized,
how's regulating it currently working out so far?

My point is that the argument being made by a couple of these mayors is that they will be able to lower pot use through regulation and taxes. I question whether they've lowered consumption of tobacco or just created a new economy. If you put pot in the liquor stores and make it reasonable you will take that away from the dealers, but raise the price and guess what. You will have people manufacturing cheaper unregulated product as with tobacco.
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
63
Ontario
You will have people manufacturing cheaper unregulated product as with tobacco.
I won't dismiss the fact that there are some unregulated tobacco producers. But the majority are regulated. Including First Nations.

Cheap alcohol is easily attained in certain areas.
 

SLM

The Velvet Hammer
Mar 5, 2011
29,151
5
36
London, Ontario
My point is that the argument being made by a couple of these mayors is that they will be able to lower pot use through regulation and taxes. I question whether they've lowered consumption of tobacco or just created a new economy. If you put pot in the liquor stores and make it reasonable you will take that away from the dealers, but raise the price and guess what. You will have people manufacturing cheaper unregulated product as with tobacco.

I think you're probably right, legalizing and taxing pot will probably follow the same trend. Because as soon as you create a new sin tax, they won't be able to stop themselves from going back to the trough again and again.

But spending all this time and money on policing, courts, etc is also a huge waste of resources. Decriminalizing may be the best option overall.

Really it's kind of six of one over half a dozen of the other as far as options go, in my opinion.

The assertion that increasing tax on tobacco is intended to curb smoking is pure b.s., a smokescreen (pun sort of intended) so as to get the public onside with a tax.
 

wulfie68

Council Member
Mar 29, 2009
2,014
24
38
Calgary, AB
As far as tobacco, I do think use in youths is declining but taxes increasing the price of a pack of cigarettes is a small part of the equation. I think the bigger influences are that society, as a whole, no longer holds smoking in a positive light, as was the case in past generations, and hand in hand with goes the education of the long term effects: the increased frequency of lung diseases, heart disease and cancerm etc. Another contributing factor, especially in youth, is the cosmetic effects: the stink of cigarette smoke is unappealing to most, it yellows teeth, and the "ashtray taste" of kissing a smoker.

Edit: As for this approach being used on pot, well, we need more documented research on long term effects of marijuana use, not just the anecdotal stuff we have now for an education and taxation scheme to be successful, IMO.
 

Kreskin

Doctor of Thinkology
Feb 23, 2006
21,155
149
63
The under 25's appear to be smoking way less than they use to. Actually every demographic is smoking less. I'm sure taxes have something to do with it. Unfortunately the tax is a bit of a false economy because more people will collect longer government entitlement benefits. It would be more cost efficient to have tax-free smokes so that most don't live long enough to bankrupt government pensions and long term healthcare resources.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,340
113
Vancouver Island
As far as tobacco, I do think use in youths is declining but taxes increasing the price of a pack of cigarettes is a small part of the equation. I think the bigger influences are that society, as a whole, no longer holds smoking in a positive light, as was the case in past generations, and hand in hand with goes the education of the long term effects: the increased frequency of lung diseases, heart disease and cancerm etc. Another contributing factor, especially in youth, is the cosmetic effects: the stink of cigarette smoke is unappealing to most, it yellows teeth, and the "ashtray taste" of kissing a smoker.

Edit: As for this approach being used on pot, well, we need more documented research on long term effects of marijuana use, not just the anecdotal stuff we have now for an education and taxation scheme to be successful, IMO.

How do you expect to get long term documented research on an illegal product? I've
been smoking pot more or less continuously for 43 years and am not any crazier than when I started and in excellent health.
Never did smoke tobacco steady and haven't had one in 11 years. Partly because of the taxes but mostly because they didn't taste good any more.

My point is that the argument being made by a couple of these mayors is that they will be able to lower pot use through regulation and taxes. I question whether they've lowered consumption of tobacco or just created a new economy. If you put pot in the liquor stores and make it reasonable you will take that away from the dealers, but raise the price and guess what. You will have people manufacturing cheaper unregulated product as with tobacco.

I think the former mayors are more interested in the revenue potential and cutting the huge waste of tax dollars in prohibition than cutting pot use.
 

Outta here

Senate Member
Jul 8, 2005
6,778
158
63
Edmonton AB
I think public opinion and the social stigma that is now attached to smoking plays as big a role if not more than the price or taxation rates.

This is often verified by others I've chatted with about this subject - with smokers and former smokers. Almost all say that the degree of embarrassment they have about smoking or even being found out to be a smoker is a strong factor in their decision to either quit, minimize or hide their tobacco usage from peers and coworkers. For some, it's right up there with health concerns.

I don't know if anyone else notices this, but when I drive by a high school nowadays, I just don't see the crowds of smoking kids huddled around the corner anymore like it used to be 20 years ago. Same with post secondary institutions. I work at one, and I rarely see students standing around smoking outside, even in the designated smoking areas.

This may be a bit of a subjective observation, but imo, but I think the next generation have chosen new addictions with which to abuse their bodies: gaming and crappy food.
 

Cannuck

Time Out
Feb 2, 2006
30,245
99
48
Alberta
I don't know if anyone else notices this, but when I drive by a high school nowadays, I just don't see the crowds of smoking kids huddled around the corner anymore like it used to be 20 years ago. Same with post secondary institutions. I work at one, and I rarely see students standing around smoking outside, even in the designated smoking areas. .


Back in my day (early 80's) we were allowed to smoke between the double doors at the school entrances.
 

VanIsle

Always thinking
Nov 12, 2008
7,046
43
48
How do you expect to get long term documented research on an illegal product? I've
been smoking pot more or less continuously for 43 years and am not any crazier than when I started and in excellent health.
Never did smoke tobacco steady and haven't had one in 11 years. Partly because of the taxes but mostly because they didn't taste good any more.



I think the former mayors are more interested in the revenue potential and cutting the huge waste of tax dollars in prohibition than cutting pot use.
Everyone is in excellent health until something like "the big one" strikes. I had coffee with a friend I had not seen for over 40 + years. She looked the picture of health. Not much excess weight, she is active, doesn't smoke and lives a relatively stress free life. The day after I saw her, she had a heart attack. How many people have you heard of that go in for a physical exam and have a heart attack within 24 hours to a week after being told they are in excellent health. Point being: nobody knows.
Regarding the sale of cigarettes (and pot would be no different except sales might be greater), it is impossible to keep any stats. The kids that are not old enough to buy their own walk in with a friend who is. Parents used to come into the store to pick up their kid who was getting off work, and buy the kids cigarettes for them! I really don't even understand the point in having an age limit regarding the purchase of cigarettes. Kids spend a lot more money on cigarettes than anyone realizes they do. They don't even try to hide it - not even the parents. They tell you outright that they are just there buying smokes for their kid. Those Mayors don't believe in anything more than the tax grab (boost) the economy will get if they legalize the sale of pot. The tax on cigarettes has not decreased the sale of them.

You can also be in drag and Smokin......:lol:
And do you want to talk about how you know about this Goober?:lol:
 

Liberalman

Senate Member
Mar 18, 2007
5,623
36
48
Toronto


They start so young