Article de Périodique
Exposing and addressing tobacco industry conduct in low-income and middle-income countries : Tobacco-free world 3 (2015)
Auteur(s) :
A. B. GILMORE ;
G. FOOKS ;
J. DROPE ;
S. A. BIALOUS ;
R. R. JACKSON
Article en page(s) :
1029-1043
Sous-type de document :
Revue de la littérature / Literature review
Refs biblio. :
204
Domaine :
Tabac / Tobacco / e-cigarette
Langue(s) :
Anglais
Discipline :
SAN (Santé publique / Public health)
Thésaurus géographique
INTERNATIONAL
Thésaurus mots-clés
TABAC
;
REVENU
;
INDUSTRIE DU TABAC
;
EVOLUTION
;
MARKETING
;
PRIX
;
POLITIQUE
;
COMMERCE
;
CONTREBANDE
Note générale :
- Comment: Deaths and taxes: stronger global tobacco control by 2025. Jha P., p. 918-920.
- Comment: Progress with the global tobacco epidemic. Britton J., p. 924-926.
- Comment: Progress with the global tobacco epidemic. Britton J., p. 924-926.
Résumé :
The tobacco industry's future depends on increasing tobacco use in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs), which face a growing burden of tobacco-related disease, yet have potential to prevent full-scale escalation of this epidemic. To drive up sales the industry markets its products heavily, deliberately targeting non-smokers and keeps prices low until smoking and local economies are sufficiently established to drive prices and profits up. The industry systematically flaunts existing tobacco control legislation and works aggressively to prevent future policies using its resource advantage to present highly misleading economic arguments, rebrand political activities as corporate social responsibility, and establish and use third parties to make its arguments more palatable. Increasingly it is using domestic litigation and international arbitration to bully LMICs from implementing effective policies and hijacking the problem of tobacco smuggling for policy gain, attempting to put itself in control of an illegal trade in which there is overwhelming historical evidence of its complicity. Progress will not be realised until tobacco industry interference is actively addressed as outlined in Article 5.3 of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control. Exemplar LMICs show this action can be achieved and indicate that exposing tobacco industry misconduct is an essential first step.
Affiliation :
Department for Health and UK Centre for Tobacco and Alcohol Studies, University of Bath, Bath, UK