A Washington Post editorial today addressed some of the arrant misinformation--often spread by tobacco interests--about the tobacco tax:
"[T]he President's Cancer Panel [endorsed] an increase in the federal excise tax on tobacco . . .
"[A]s the President's Cancer Panel noted, while the new tax would fall more heavily on lower-income smokers, 'tax increases also result in greater reductions in smoking among this population, with the dual effect of shifting the tax burden to higher-income smokers.' This is not some rogue group; its three members, appointed by Mr. Bush, are LaSalle Leffall, professor of surgery at Howard University and chairman of the board of the Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation; Margaret L. Kripke, executive vice president of the University of Texas M.D. Anderson Cancer Center; and cyclist and cancer survivor Lance Armstrong.
. . .
"Some 1.9 million children alive today would not become smokers, and 1.2 million adult smokers would quit. The administration argues that because tobacco taxes are effective in reducing smoking, the increase would not produce enough to fund SCHIP after the first five years. That's true -- but it's an argument for the tax, not against it."
Link: http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/10/16/AR2007101601817.html




Loading comments…

Posted October 16, 2007 | 03:35 PM (EST)