» Articles » PMID: 29643096

The Health, Poverty, and Financial Consequences of a Cigarette Price Increase Among 500 Million Male Smokers in 13 Middle Income Countries: Compartmental Model Study

Overview
Journal BMJ
Specialty General Medicine
Date 2018 Apr 13
PMID 29643096
Citations 29
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: To examine the impact of a 50% increase in market prices of cigarettes on health, poverty, and financial protection.

Design: Compartmental model study.

Setting: 13 middle income countries, totalling two billion men.

Participants: 500 million male smokers.

Main Outcome Measures: Life years gained, averted treatment costs, number of men avoiding catastrophic healthcare expenditures and poverty, and additional tax revenue by income group.

Results: A 50% increase in cigarette prices would lead to about 450 million years of life gained across the 13 countries from smoking cessation, with half of these in China. Across all countries, men in the bottom income group (poorest 20% of the population) would gain 6.7 times more life years than men in the top income group (richest 20% of the population; 155 23 million). The average life years gained from cessation for each smoker in the bottom income group was 5.1 times that of the top group (1.46 0.23 years). Of the $157bn (£113bn; €127bn) in averted treatment costs, the bottom income group would avert 4.6 times more costs than the top income group ($46bn $10bn). About 15.5 million men would avoid catastrophic health expenditures in a subset of seven countries without universal health coverage. As result, 8.8 million men, half of them in the bottom income group, would avoid falling below the World Bank definition of extreme poverty. These 8.8 million men constitute 2.4% of people living in extreme poverty in these countries. In contrast, the top income group would pay twice as much as the bottom income group of the $122bn additional tax collected. Overall, the bottom income group would get 31% of the life years saved and 29% each of the averted disease costs and averted catastrophic health expenditures, while paying only 10% of the additional taxes.

Conclusions: Higher prices of cigarettes provide more health and financial gains to the poorest 20% than to the richest 20% of the population. Higher excise taxes support the targets of the sustainable development goals on non-communicable diseases and poverty, and provides financial protection against illness.

Citing Articles

Tobacco and household expenditure in Egypt: insights into socioeconomic inequalities and spending profiles from the Household Income, Expenditure and Consumption Survey.

Mostafa A, Hussein R BMC Public Health. 2025; 25(1):598.

PMID: 39948505 PMC: 11827235. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-025-21676-w.


Unlocking the power of tobacco taxation to mitigate the social costs of smoking in Mexico: a microsimulation model.

Saenz-de-Miera B, Reynales-Shigematsu L, Palacios A, Bardach A, Casarini A, Espinola N Health Policy Plan. 2024; 39(9):902-915.

PMID: 39120964 PMC: 11474612. DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czae068.


Factors associated with smoking intensity among adult smokers: findings from the longitudinal cohort of the Tehran lipid and glucose study.

Abbasi-Dokht-Rafsanjani M, Hosseinzadeh S, Bakhshi E, Azizi F, Khalili D BMC Public Health. 2023; 23(1):2512.

PMID: 38102617 PMC: 10722763. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-023-17232-z.


Taxation of tobacco, alcohol, and sugar-sweetened beverages: reviewing the evidence and dispelling the myths.

Paraje G, Jha P, Savedoff W, Fuchs A BMJ Glob Health. 2023; 8(Suppl 8).

PMID: 37813440 PMC: 10565262. DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2023-011866.


Socioeconomic differences in the impact of prices and taxes on tobacco use in low- and middle-income countries-A systematic review.

Guindon G, Abbas U, Trivedi R, Garasia S, Johnson S, John R PLOS Glob Public Health. 2023; 3(9):e0002342.

PMID: 37756265 PMC: 10529577. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0002342.


References
1.
Jha P, Peto R, Zatonski W, Boreham J, Jarvis M, Lopez A . Social inequalities in male mortality, and in male mortality from smoking: indirect estimation from national death rates in England and Wales, Poland, and North America. Lancet. 2006; 368(9533):367-70. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(06)68975-7. View

2.
Norheim O, Jha P, Admasu K, Godal T, Hum R, Kruk M . Avoiding 40% of the premature deaths in each country, 2010-30: review of national mortality trends to help quantify the UN sustainable development goal for health. Lancet. 2014; 385(9964):239-52. DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(14)61591-9. View

3.
Jha P, Jacob B, Gajalakshmi V, Gupta P, Dhingra N, Kumar R . A nationally representative case-control study of smoking and death in India. N Engl J Med. 2008; 358(11):1137-47. DOI: 10.1056/NEJMsa0707719. View

4.
Evans D, Etienne C . Health systems financing and the path to universal coverage. Bull World Health Organ. 2010; 88(6):402. PMC: 2878164. DOI: 10.2471/BLT.10.078741. View

5.
Gallet C, List J . Cigarette demand: a meta-analysis of elasticities. Health Econ. 2003; 12(10):821-35. DOI: 10.1002/hec.765. View