Tobacco Tax Increases: A Health and Revenue Win for States
To continue driving down tobacco use, states should significantly increase tobacco taxes and allocate some of the revenue to boost funding for tobacco prevention and cessation programs. The scientific evidence is clear that tobacco tax increases are one of the most effective ways to reduce smoking and other tobacco use, especially among kids. The report details the health and economic benefits to each state from increasing its cigarette tax by $1.50 per pack. If every state and the District of Columbia did so, they would collectively: -
Prevent 231,600 kids from smoking;
- Prompt 860,300 adults to quit smoking within the first year;
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Prevent 275,400 premature, smoking-caused deaths;
- Save $14.3 billion in long-term health care costs, including $363 million in Medicaid costs in the first five years; and
- Raise over $6 billion in new revenue in the first year alone.
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