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Why trade and investment liberalisation may threaten effective tobacco control efforts
  1. CYNTHIA CALLARD, Executive Director
  1. Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada
  2. Ottawa, Canada
  3. ccallard@smoke-free.ca
  4. Thailand Health Promotion Institute
  5. National Health Foundation
  6. Bangkok, Thailand
  7. pirayu@asianet.co.th
  8. Co-director
  9. Essential Action
  10. PO Box 19405
  11. Washington DC, USA
  12. rob@essential.org.
  1. Robert Weissman
  1. HATAI CHITANONDH, President
  1. Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada
  2. Ottawa, Canada
  3. ccallard@smoke-free.ca
  4. Thailand Health Promotion Institute
  5. National Health Foundation
  6. Bangkok, Thailand
  7. pirayu@asianet.co.th
  8. Co-director
  9. Essential Action
  10. PO Box 19405
  11. Washington DC, USA
  12. rob@essential.org.
  1. Robert Weissman
  1. ROBERT WEISSMAN
  1. Physicians for a Smoke-Free Canada
  2. Ottawa, Canada
  3. ccallard@smoke-free.ca
  4. Thailand Health Promotion Institute
  5. National Health Foundation
  6. Bangkok, Thailand
  7. pirayu@asianet.co.th
  8. Co-director
  9. Essential Action
  10. PO Box 19405
  11. Washington DC, USA
  12. rob@essential.org.
  1. Robert Weissman

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Trade and investment liberalisation in tobacco products offers no benefits for tobacco control. Thus, if trade and investment liberalisation—as embodied in international agreements or viewed as an economic process—may harm tobacco control, as we believe it might, then trade and investment liberalisation in tobacco is an unhealthy and inappropriate public policy.

We support the resolution of the 11th World Conference on Tobacco or Health that called on “the international tobacco control community [to] work vigorously to exclude and remove tobacco and tobacco products from bilateral and multilateral trade agreements that would have negative public health consequences.”1

We think this position is well supported by the record of the last two decades on trade and tobacco, the text of existing trade agreements, and the threats posed by proposals for expanded trade and investment agreements.

The US trade offensive

In the 1980s, the Office of the US Trade Representative, working hand-in-glove with US cigarette companies, used the threat of trade sanctions to pry open key markets in Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, and Thailand.

In the face of US threats, these countries removed restrictions on tobacco imports. In Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea, the result was a rapid rise in smoking rates. After South Korea opened its market to US companies in 1988, for example, smoking rates among male Korean teens rose from 18.4% to 29.8% in a single year, according to the US General Accounting Office.2 The smoking rate among female teens more than quintupled from 1.6% to 8.7%.2 Overall, according to World Bank estimates, the opening of Asian markets to US cigarettes escalated Asian smoking rates 10% above what they would have been.3 Price competition and advertising—the introduction of slick promotional strategies that link cigarettes with notions of sophistication, freedom, and “hipness”, and a heavy linkage between smoking and sports and …

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