California
approves tax increase on cigarettes
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[November 09, 2016]
By Jilian Mincer
(Reuters) - California voters agreed to
significantly increase the tax on cigarettes and vaping devices, but
similar measures fell short in Colorado, North Dakota and Missouri,
according to late Tuesday vote tallies.
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California's Proposition 56 will increase taxes on a pack of
cigarette from 87 cents to $2.87, bringing it more in line with
other states. The measure also sets a tax on electronic cigarettes.
"This is a huge victory for tobacco prevention effort," said John
Schachter, director of state communications for the Campaign for
Tobacco-Free Kids. He said that California, which recently raised
the smoking age to 21, could inspire other states to pass similar
laws.
While U.S. smoking rates have declined significantly in recent
decades as more people recognize smoking's links to lung cancer and
other diseases, health advocates have sought to prevent a new
generation from taking up tobacco.
Healthcare groups say high cigarette taxes discourage smoking, while
the proceeds help states pay for smoking cessation and prevention
programs.
"Every 10 percent increase in the price of cigarettes brings about a
7 percent decrease in use by youth and a 4 percent decrease
overall," said Schachter.
Opponents - including tobacco companies R.J. Reynolds Tobacco and
Altria - spent at least $90 million to defeat the measures,
including more than $70 million in California against Proposition
56. Supporters of the tax, including billionaire investor Tom Steyer,
the political action committees representing the California Hospital
Association and the Service Employees International Union, raised
more than $30 million to promote it.
The initiative is expected to raise $1 billion to $1.4 billion in
new tax revenues for California. Most of that would go to Medi-Cal,
the state's healthcare program for low-income residents.
Opponents said the ballot would increase black market sales of the
cigarettes and was misleading because "just 13 percent (of the new
tax revenue) goes to tobacco prevention and control programs," said
Beth Miller, spokesperson for the NO on Prop. 56 – Stop the Special
Interest Tax Grab – Committee.
Wells Fargo Securities analyst Bonnie Herzog said that tobacco
companies could use their pricing power to mitigate a victory even
in California, which is the single largest cigarette consumer by
state.
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"A bigger potential 'risk' is that other states follow suit and try
to push through similar pro-tax measures via legislation," she said.
The average U.S. state tax rate is $1.65 per pack, according to the
Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. Thirty-four states have cigarette
tax rates higher than $1 per pack and 16 states have rates of $2 or
more. Chicago has the highest combined state and local tax rate at
$6.16 a pack, followed by New York City at $5.85 a pack.
North Dakota currently has the third lowest cigarette tax rate in
the country at 44 cents a pack. Voters turned down an increase that
would have been the state's first in 25 years.
Voters in Colorado, currently ranked 38th in cigarette taxation,
voted down a measure to add $1.75 in tax to a pack, raising the levy
to $2.59. The state's Amendment 72 also would have increased taxes
on other tobacco products such as cigars and chewing tobacco.
Missouri on Tuesday rejected a ballot measure that would have
increased taxes by 15 cents annually for four years. It remains the
nation's lowest tax at 17 cents a pack and New York the highest at
$4.35. Healthcare groups opposed the Missouri hike because they
considered it too low to discourage consumers from purchasing
cigarettes.
(Reporting By Jilian Mincer in New York and Deena Beasley in Los
Angeles; Editing by Michele Gershberg and Jonathan Oatis)
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