The Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance (SEATCA)
welcomes new taxes on electronic cigarettes and heated tobacco products (HTPs)
signed into law by Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte on 22 January 2020 to
protect the health of all Filipinos especially the youth and the poor.
“E-cigarettes and heated tobacco products are harmful,
promote youth addiction, and reduce the success of smokers wanting to quit
their addiction. New taxes on these products are a win for the health of all
Filipinos, particularly the youth, but while the new tax rates are certainly
higher than rates approved by the previous Congress, they should be raised
further to at least the same level as traditional cigarettes,” said Dr. Ulysses
Dorotheo, Executive Director of SEATCA.
The 2018 National Nutrition Survey already shows that 20
percent of e-cigarette users in the Philippines are aged 10 to 19 years old.
This proportion of youth e-cigarette smokers is 3 times higher than the proportion of youth cigarette smokers.
Currently, the tobacco epidemic claims more than 117,000
lives in the Philippines annually and over 8 million lives globally every year.
The government should act proactively to prevent a new epidemic before it takes
root, one that threatens to prolong rather than end the current tobacco epidemic.
The World Health Organization (WHO) has already warned that
all forms of tobacco, including HTPs, are harmful and that e-cigarettes are
undoubtedly harmful. More than 40 countries already ban the sale of
e-cigarettes and HTPs, including four ASEAN countries: Brunei Darussalam,
Cambodia, Singapore, and Thailand.
Coupled with a higher tax on alcohol products, taxes on
e-cigarettes and HTPs will make the tax reforms overwhelmingly pro-youth,
pro-poor and pro-health. (PR)
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