Pubdate: Thu, 18 May 2000 Source: International Herald-Tribune (France) Copyright: International Herald Tribune 2000 Page: 6 Contact: 181, Avenue Charles de Gaulle, 92521 Neuilly Cedex, France Fax: (33) 1 41 43 93 38 Website: http://www.iht.com/ Author: Lester R. Brown Note: The writer is chairman of Worldwatch Institute, a nonprofit research organization that analyses global development issues. He contributed this comment to the International Herald Tribune FINALLY, THE WORLD BEGINS TO PUT OUT ITS CIGARETTES WASHINGTON -- After a century-long buildup in cigarette smoking, the world is turning away from cigarettes, following the lead of the United States. In 1999 cigarettes smoked per person m the U.S. fell by 8 percent and for the world as a whole by more than 3 percent. The U.S. trend is driven by a deepening awareness of the health-damaging effects of smoking. Rising cigarette prices and taxes, aggressive anti smoking campaigns in several states and a decline in the social acceptability of smoking also helped damp demand. Smoking is declining in nearly all the major cigarette consuming countries, including such bastions of smoking as France, China and Japan. The number of cigarettes smoked per person has dropped 19 percent in France since peaking in 1985, 8 percent in China since 1990 and 4 percent in Japan since 1992, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture's world tobacco database. Evidence of the damaging effects of cigarette smoking on human health continues to accumulate. Today there are some 25 known tobacco-related diseases, including heart disease, strokes, respiratory illnesses, several forms of cancer and male impotence. One of the mainstays of California's highly successful antismoking campaign is a television commercial in which a man's flirtation with a woman fails when the cigarette in his mouth begins to droop. Experience indicates that while adolescent males may not be particularly worried about their mortality, they are concerned about their sexuality. In Thailand, cigarette packs carry the warning "Cigarette smoking causes sexual impotence." Smoking takes a heavy human toll. The World Health Organization estimates that 4 million people die prematurely each year from smoking cigarettes. The 400,000 lives claimed each year by smoking-related illnesses in the United States matches the number of Americans who died in World War II In China, smoking takes an estimated 2,000 lives a day. Over the years, mounting evidence of the effect of smoking on health gradually undermined the tobacco industry's steadfast denial of such a link. As it did so, the industry lost credibility. Cigarette manufacturers began to lose expensive lawsuits as juries held them responsible for health damage to smokers. To cover costs, cigarette manufacturers raised prices. But as they did so, state governments raised cigarette taxes. The states also insisted that the Tobacco Institute, the industry's powerful lobbying aim, be dismantled. On Jan. 29, 1999, the Institute, one of the best funded lobbies in Washington, with a full-time staff of 60, closed its doors. Restrictions on cigarette advertising, which began with a ban on television and radio ads in the United States, are spreading. For example, the European Union recently passed legislation prohibiting all advertising of cigarettes by 2006. Bans on smoking are also spreading. The American total ban on smoking on airplanes has been widely adopted by airlines in other countries. The same thing is happening in restaurants, on public transportation and in the workplace. Until recently, U.S. cigarette manufacturers were not overly concerned that Americans were smoking fewer cigarettes because they saw a huge market opening in the developing world. But they failed to take into account the globalization of the antismoking effort. Indeed, several Third World governments are suing U.S. tobacco companies in U.S. courts, seeking to recover their costs of treating smoking-related illnesses. As the social costs of smoking become more visible, and as the number of smoking-related deaths climbs, the global anti-smoking campaign is gathering momentum. Governments that once saw cigarettes only as a source of revenue are now also looking at the spiraling costs of treating smoking-related illnesses. Meanwhile, the challenge is to sustain the decline in smoking by expanding the worldwide educational effort on its adverse health effects, further restricting advertising, extending the bans on smoking in public places and workplaces and raising taxes on cigarettes to a level that more fully reflects their cost to society. The goal should be to make smoking as socially unacceptable as it is costly to human health and the economy. - --- MAP posted-by: Allan Wilkinson