
Why
did the World Bank produce a report on tobacco?
What are the
topics covered in this report?
For whom is
this report intended?
How was the
report produced?
Who are the
authors of this report and its background papers?
What are the
sources of data used in the report?
What is the
World Banks Policy on Tobacco?
Why did
the World Bank produce a report on tobacco?
While the effects of tobacco on
health are less and less disputed, attention has turned increasingly to the economic
arguments for and against tobacco control. However, the debate usually occurs in the
absence of empiric and systematic analyses of the economics of tobacco control. The World
Bank, with its comparative advantage in economic and inter-sectoral analyses, can help
fill that gap: hence this report. It is the first comprehensive examination of the fiscal,
trade, regulatory, agricultural and industrial aspects of global tobacco use and control.
While it is not intended as an operational guide to tobacco control, the report aims to
inform the global debate by covering important issues that most societies and policymakers
face when they think about tobacco or its control.
What are the
topics covered in this report?
This report outlines effective
policy interventions to reduce smoking in developing countries. It discusses tobacco use
and its consequences both on health and on the economy, and highlights the relationship
between smoking and poverty. It examines how tobacco differs from other consumer goods and
spells out a rationale for government involvement in tobacco control. It provides an
evidence-based review of policies to reduce demand for cigarettes, including taxation, the
provision of information about the health consequences of smoking, comprehensive bans on
advertising and promotion, and regulatory changes. The report concludes that raising
tobacco taxes and introducing a package of other demand-reducing measures could
substantially cut the number of smoking-related deaths worldwide.
Next, the report critically reviews the
impact of measures to reduce the supply of tobacco, for example through crop substitution,
or through trade restrictions, and concludes that these are unlikely to be effective.
However, it concludes that one supply-side intervention-tough controls on cigarette
smuggling-would reap rewards.
Critically, for policymakers, the report
discusses the impact of tobacco control programs on economies: on jobs, tax revenue and on
individual consumers. It concludes that many of the concerns that have deterred
policymakers from acting to control tobacco in the past are unfounded or exaggerated. It
provides new evidence on the cost-effectiveness of control interventions, concluding that
raising taxes is a particularly effective way to achieve health returns on modest
investment. Finally, it outlines broad recommendations for national and international
action, including future research directions.
For whom is
this report intended?
The reports audience will
be officials in Ministries of Finance, Commerce, Trade and Health in low- and
middle-income countries and in development agencies, as well as academic economists,
epidemiologists, those working in tobacco control programs, and health planners.
How was the
report produced?
This report was conducted in
close partnership with WHO. Seventeen analytic papers commissioned by the WB constitute
the background for this report and most will be published next year in a separate volume,
Tobacco Control in Developing Countries- (Oxford University Press). Earlier outlines for
the report were critically reviewed by policymakers from developing countries at workshops
sponsored by the World Bank and WHO. These workshops were held in June 1996 in Washington,
DC; in August 1997 in Beijing, China; and in February 1998 in Cape Town, South Africa. The
background papers for the report have undergone two rounds of external, anonymous peer
review and one Technical Review Workshop. The second review workshop will be in June 1999.
The report itself has been reviewed extensively within the World Bank on three occasions,
and by an external panel convened by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Who are the
authors of this report and its background papers?
This report and it background
papers were produced by an international team of economists, public health specialists,
social scientists, public policy and legal experts from the World Bank and academic
institutions in many different countries.
What are the
sources of data used in the report?
The report and its background papers
draw on several data sources including: (i) recently published estimates of global deaths
and disability from the Global Burden of Disease Project; (ii) recent indirect estimates
of tobacco-attributable mortality from industrialized countries; (iii) the WHO mortality
database; (iv) World Bank data on tobacco production, trade, prices, and taxes, including
an ongoing survey in selected countries; (v) various pricing data from the tobacco
industry; (vi) Bank literature, country reports, and databases; and (vii) summaries of the
literature, such as those by the Cochrane Collaboration and the WHOs Tobacco Free
Initiative.
What
is the World Banks Policy on Tobacco?
Since 1991 the
World Bank has had a formal policy of not lending for tobacco production and encouraging
tobacco control. The policy contains five main points. First, the Banks activities
in the health sector discourage the use of tobacco products. Second, the Bank does not
lend directly for, invest in, or guarantee investment or loans for, tobacco production,
processing or marketing. Third, the Bank does not lend indirectly to tobacco production
activities, to the extent that this is practicable. Fourth, tobacco and its related
processing machinery and equipment cannot be included among imports financed under loans.
Fifth, tobacco and tobacco-related imports may be exempt from borrowers agreements
with the Bank to liberalize trade and reduce tariffs. |