Ban on Tobacco Advertisements by the Government of India: A Case Study
On Feb 6, 2001
Government of India (GOI) dropped a bombshell on the tobacco Industry when it
announced that it would shortly table a bill banning Tobacco Companies from
advertising their products and sponsoring sports and cultural events. The
objective of such a ban was to discourage adolescents from consuming tobacco
products and also arm the Government with powers to launch an anti-Tobacco
Program.
This decision
seemed to have sparked an intense debate, not just over the ethical aspects of
Government's moral policing but also over the achievability of the objective
itself. Reacting strongly against the proposed ban, Suhel Seth, CEO, Equus
Advertising said, "The ban does not have teeth. It is a typical knee-jerk
reaction by any Government to create some kind of popularity for itself.
The Legislation
has not been thought thorough". In its reaction to the GOI's decision, ITC
Ltd. announced that it would voluntarily withdraw from all of the sponsorship
events, irrespective of the legal position on the subject.
In a statement
it said, "ITC believes that this action on its part will create the right
climate for a constructive dialogue that will help develop appropriate content,
rules & regulations to make the intended legislation equitable and
implementable". The complexity of the issue was that, the issue involved
the tussle between the ethical and commercial considerations. On the one hand,
was tobacco, the most dangerous consumer product known, which killed when used
as the makers' intended. Therefore from an ethical standpoint, the Government
had to discourage the habit, as it was responsible for the welfare of its
citizens.
On the other
hand, the tobacco Industry was a major contributor to the State Exchequer (In
the Year 2000-01 it contributed about Rs. 8000 crores in excise revenue) which
was extremely important, given the financial crunch which it faced. In the
light of the above statements, what approach should the government choose-the
ethical or commercial and is it proper for government to interfere in matters
of personal choice in the first place? To make the matter more complex, there
was the question- was the objective achievable at all and was it equitable? The
answers to these questions lay in understanding the viewpoints of both
sides-those in favour and those against such bans.
The ban was not
unusual keeping in view the international precedents. Countries like France,
Finland, and Norway had already imposed similar bans. Advocates of free choice
opposed to these bans, saying these amounted to unwarranted intrusion by the
state in the private lives of its citizens. But, others pointed out that the
state had the right to intervene in the overall interest of the citizens. They
cited the example of drugs like cocaine, which was, banned the world over.
In 1981, the
Supreme Court (of Appeal) in Belgium gave its ruling that a ban on tobacco
advertising was not unconstitutional. In 1991 the French Constitutional Council
declared that the French ban on advertising tobacco products was not
unconstitutional as it was based on the need to protect public health and did
not curtail the freedom of trade. There were many precedents of restrictions
being imposed on the advertising of dangerous or potentially dangerous products
even if these products remained in the market (e.g. firearms, pharmaceutical
Products).
According to the
World Health Organisation (WHO), tobacco accounted for over 3 million deaths in
1990, the figure rising to 4.023 million deaths in 1998. It was estimated that
tobacco related deaths would rise to 8.4 million in 2020 and to 10 million in
about 2030. There was an increasing fear that tobacco companies were inducing
children and young people to begin experimenting with tobacco products, and in
this way initiate regular smoking, as this held the key for the industry to
flourish.
Internal
industry documents2 released in the United States, described 14-24 year olds as
'tomorrow's cigarette business.' In a case which started in 1991 and ended in
1997, RJ Reynolds Tobacco company, marketer of Camel cigarettes, was forced to
withdraw its mascot, Joe Carmel, an animated camel, from all its
advertisements, after the California Supreme Court (USA) ruled that the company
could be prosecuted for exploiting minors.
The accusation
was that the slick, colourful advertisements (using an animated camel) appealed
to the children and encouraged them to smoke. In India, analysts estimated that
cigarettes contributed only 0.14% of the G.D.P and the health costs roughly
translated to 0.21% of the G.D.P. So the revenue logic of huge contribution in
the form of excise to the Exchequer did not seem to be valid. Also, given the
state's significant contribution to health care, smokers, by damaging their
health were in fact enhancing the State's expenditure. Questions were also
raised about the economic impact of such a ban, given the fact that the tobacco
industry provided direct and indirect employment to 26 million people.
However, a study
on tobacco consumption and employment3, showed that effective policies to
reduce smoking were likely to increase, and not decrease employment. The reason
for this was that when people stopped smoking, the money did not disappear from
the economy. It was spent on other goods and services, which the study showed,
were more labour intensive. This, in turn produced more jobs.
The impact of
cigarette advertising on consumers was another contentious issue. A World Bank
report4, had pointed out that policymakers who wanted to control tobacco should
be aware of the fact that bans on advertising and promotion would prove
effective, only if they were comprehensive-covering all media and all uses of
brand names and logos.
The report also
published the details of a comprehensive study of over 100 countries, comparing
the consumption trends over time in those countries where were relatively
complete bans on advertising and promotion and where were no such bans5. In the
countries with nearly complete bans, the downward trend in consumption was much
steeper (Refer Figure 1)
TRENDS IN CIGARETTE CONSUMPTION
In 1992, the
Department of Health (DOH), UK reviewed various forms of evidence to assess
whether tobacco advertising affected the aggregate demand for tobacco
products.6 Four countries (Norway, Finland, Canada and New Zealand) were
chosen, as these countries had already imposed an advertising ban and enforced
it effectively. The main conclusion of the DOH was that the evidence available
on these four countries indicated a significant effect.
In each case,
the banning of advertising was followed by a fall in smoking. In 1997, in a
similar study for the International Union against Cancer, the available data in
the same four countries was examined7. It was found that per capita consumption
of cigarettes (15 years +) had dropped between 14 and 37 % after the implementation
of the ban.
In three out of
the four countries, smoking among young people had decreased, while in one it
remained stable. The conclusion was that advertising bans worked if they were
properly implemented as part of a comprehensive tobacco control policy8.
Those who
opposed the ban contended that by putting a ban on advertisements and
sponsorships by tobacco companies, the state was effectively stepping in to
tell smokers that they were incapable of deciding by themselves what was good
or bad for their health and that, therefore it had to play the role of a
responsible nanny. Said Amit Sarkar, Editor, Tobacco News9, "Adults who
consume tobacco do so of their own free choice. The risk falls entirely on them
and is fully explained to them.
If we lose sight
of this principle, then we lose sight of the truth on which all the free
societies depend, namely that freedom and risks are inextricable, and
whomsoever assumes the right to save us from risks, is also assuming right to
limit our freedom". The Supreme Court in Canada, held, "The State
seeks to control the thought, beliefs and behavior of its citizens along the
line it considers acceptable. This form of paternalism is unacceptable in a
free and democratic society".
Also, if it were
legal to manufacture and sell tobacco products, it should be legal to advertise
it as well. Tobacco companies around the world have been vehemently denying
that they sell the concept of smoking. They insist that the role of marketing,
was merely to assist adults in making an informed brand choice and that
advertising merely enhanced the market share of a particular brand.
The companies
claimed that advertising for a particular brand was most relevant to consumers
who already smoked that brand. Cigarette advertisements were least relevant to
people who did not smoke and were neither directed at them nor likely to
influence them. They also denied that they targeted teenagers and young people
as a growth strategy and said that they only targeted adult smokers. In 1998,
in a survey conducted by the Indian Market Research Bureau (IMRB), 49% of the
respondents said they started smoking to see what it was like, 24% said 'all my
friends smoke'; and no one said advertising had induced them to start smoking.
Scepticism
regarding the effectiveness of the ban also stemmed from the fact that the ban
seemed to have ignored the reality of the Indian Market. The organised-sector,
which mainly produced cigarettes, comprised only 16% of the market, while
remaining 84% was accounted for by other products like 'beedi,' 'ghutkas,' etc.
The ban was likely to have no major impact on their sales. Analysts felt that
ban on ads would reduce the consumers ability to distinguish between products
of differing quality, and slow down the progression of Indian consumers up the
scale from harmful tobacco consumption (like ghutka, zarda etc.) to more
refined forms.
Some analysts
pointed out that the ban could lead to spurt in surrogate advertising, which
could defeat the very purpose of the ban. Moreover, there seemed to be no sense
in imposing such a ban on the domestic players, when the foreign magazines that
sold in India and the television channels that were uplinked from foreign
countries carried advertisements by cigarette multinationals.
For example
Marlboro, which sponsored Formula I racing was very popular with well-to-do
Indian youth, even minors. Formula I could be viewed on the sports channels, as
they were uplinked from outside the country. Analysts felt that this would put
the Indian industry at a disadvantage. The Tobacco industry was a large
contributor to the State Exchequer. In 2000-01 it contributed Rs 8,182 crore
which was 12% of the total excise revenue. About 90% of this came from
cigarettes. India was the world's third largest tobacco maker, with an annual
output of 550 million Kg. Analysts were of the opinion that any control may
have an adverse impact on the contributions to the state exchequer.
Again, the
industry provided direct and indirect employment to 26 million people- of this,
roughly 6 million were farmers and almost 5 million were 'beedi' rollers.
Stringent measures could cause millions of workers to be displaced. It was also
felt that, India, being the third largest producer of tobacco in the world,
with all the multiplier effect, and with one of the lowest per capita tobacco
consumption in the world, should tread the anti-tobacco path with caution.
Some analysts
contested claims that the state had to spend considerable amounts on providing
healthcare as a result of smoking induced illness. They pointed out, that in a
developing country like India, where the expenditure on public healthcare,
insurance and pension systems was meagre, the argument of health costs was
irrelevant.
Even allowing
that illnesses caused by smoking led to an increase in state spending on
healthcare, it could be argued that these illnesses also reduced the state's
liabilities on old-age pensions- assuming that those who fall ill would die
prematurely as a result.
A number of
research studies conducted to determine the relationship between advertising
and smoking indicated that advertising did not seem to influence people to
smoke (Refer Box). A study conducted by the Center for Monitoring Indian
Economy (CMIE), found that there was only a weak correlation between the money
spent by cigarette companies on advertisements and the consumption of the
cigarette (Figure II).
In the US, a
study10 was done to examine the relation between cigarette advertising and
consumption between 1961-90. The finding was that "aggregate advertising
expenditure and total consumption of cigarettes in the United States were not
significantly related from 1961-90." An advertising ban was implemented in
Norway in 1975, but consumption of tobacco remained virtually unchanged from
the period before the ban all the way through 1995. Researchers from the
Norwegian National Council on Smoking and Health11 who compared smoking trends
in Norway with those in seven other European countries, also found that Norway
had the highest per capita proportion of adult smokers among all the countries
surveyed.
Smoking among
young people increased in Finland after its tobacco advertising ban in 1978,
according to researchers at the University of Helsinki who conducted studies in
the late 1980s and early 1990s. A 1993 study12 examined annual cigarette
consumption in 22 OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development)
countries from 1964 to 1990. The conclusion was that advertising bans, where
they existed, did not reduce tobacco consumption.
THE HAZE
Tobacco
consumption was growing in the developing countries while it was falling in the
developed countries. Concerned over the welfare of its citizens, who were fast
becoming a prey, the Indian government decided to ban advertising by tobacco
companies as a first step towards its goal of discouraging smokers. But the
advocates of free choice and the cigarette companies (the worst hit in the
tobacco industry when the ban was imposed) insisted that ban was no solution to
the problem.
Said Shunu Sen,
CEO, Quadra Advisory, "Excess of anything is bad. Excess of coffee,
tea...whatever. Where do we draw the line?" They argued that that the ban
was unjustified, as advertisements didn't promote smoking, and that the ban was
not the right solution to the problem. The Cigarette companies expressed
concern that the ban would deny them level-playing field.
The issues
discussed above at best gave an idea of how complex the problem was. This was
the crux of the problem. The problem itself seemed so intricate as it questioned
the very domain of propriety; both ethical and commercial and the 'ifs and
buts' were too hazy and one too many. No wonder the debate over the state
control on tobacco consumption was clouded in an enigmatic tussle-a tussle
between rhetoric and plain talk, of arguments and counter arguments, of claims
and counter claims.
Questions [Each question carries 10 Marks; Answer any
5 of the 6 Questions]
Total Marks = 50 (10 *5)
1. Do you think
that banning of Tobacco Advertisements would lead to reduction of smokers in a
county like India? Elaborate your answer with relevant examples.
Answer :
In reference to
the current case, we can discuss the various aspects and the impacts of banning
of Tobacco advertisements in our country as follows.
We observed from
the case that Government of India (GOI) announced that it would shortly table a
bill banning Tobacco Companies from advertising their products and sponsoring
sports and cultural events On Feb 6, 2001. The objective as clearly understood of
such a ban was to discourage adolescents from consuming tobacco products and
also arm the Government with powers to launch an anti-Tobacco Program. This
decision seems to be complex as it involved the tussle between the ethical and
commercial considerations. Though considering the side effects of tobacco
consumption, it is clearly understood from an ethical standpoint, the
Government had to discourage the habit, as it was responsible for the welfare
of its citizens.
There are many
cases which proved that the ban of such harmful and toxic products is not
something unusual and government should take imitative to make country a safer
place to stay. Instances like In 1991 the French Constitutional Council
declared that the French ban on advertising tobacco products was not
unconstitutional as it was based on the need to protect public health and did
not curtail the freedom of trade. There were many precedents of restrictions
being imposed on the advertising of dangerous or potentially dangerous products
even if these products remained in the market (e.g. firearms, pharmaceutical
Products).
In order to find
out the correlation between advertisements and its impact on tobacco
consumption we simply observed multiple viewpoints. In 1992, the Department of
Health (DOH), UK provided the following data that the banning of advertising
was followed by a fall in smoking. In 1997, in a similar study for the
International Union against Cancer, the available data in the same four
countries was examined7. It was found that per capita consumption of cigarettes
(15 years +) had dropped between 14 and 37 % after the implementation of the
ban. On the contrary the report provided
by the Center for Monitoring
Indian Economy (CMIE), found that there was only a weak correlation between the
money spent by cigarette companies on advertisements and the consumption
of the cigarette.
Impact on India
Now if we discuss
that matter from the view point of Developing countries like India, the data revealed
that Tobacco consumption was growing in the developing countries while it was
falling in the developed countries. Concerned over the welfare of its citizens,
who were fast becoming a prey, the Indian government decided to ban advertising
by tobacco companies as a first step towards its goal of discouraging smokers.
But the advocates of free choice and the cigarette companies (the worst hit in
the tobacco industry when the ban was imposed) insisted that ban was no
solution to the problem. Though from my viewpoint I think that banning of Tobacco
advertisements will definitely reduce the overall consumption of Tobacco in its
different forms.
·
There are approximately 120
million smokers in India. According to the World Health Organization
(WHO), India is home to 12% of the world's smokers. More than 10
million die each year due to tobacco in India. According to a 2002 WHO estimate, 25% of adult
males in India smoke.
· Tobacco consumption is a huge
public health issue in India and its impact is especially devastating among the
poor. Effective tobacco control should be a top priority, both as a health
issue and as a method to reduce poverty.
·
Tobacco use is deeply ingrained
as a cultural practice and there are a myriad of tobacco types.
·
Tobacco use in India is
projected to have devastating consequences.
· Tobacco control policies have
the opportunity to break this vicious cycle. Tobacco control should be a top
priority not only merely as a health issue but also as a poverty reduction
mechanism.
· Effective implementation of
tobacco control policies provides an opportunity for India to fulfil its
commitments to meet the goals – 2030 agenda of Sustainability Development Goal
of poverty reduction and good health.
· We can take Banning of Tobacco Advertisements
as an effective Tobacco control tool which will stop creating more awareness to
mass people and thereby reduce its consumption.
·
The education and awareness of
the side effects would on the contrary lead to reduction of the same.
Summing up: We can
conclude from the above discussion that Government should take effective measures
in order to intervene into one of the biggest socio economic problems of our
country i.e. tobacco consumption. The various measures taken by the government
on such ethical ground either banning advertisements or any other measures if
any will always be welcomed by the society at large.
2. India is one
of the largest contributor to the Tobacco Industry, do you think banning of
tobacco advertisement is the right decision taken by the Indian Government? Answer
with logical points.
3. Advertisement
of Tobacco products do not target teenagers, so banning of tobacco
advertisements will not have any effect in reducing the number of Smokers. Do
you agree to this sentence? If Yes, specify why? If No, elaborate with relevant
logic. Give your logic for or against the statement.
4. In a country
like India, Government should spend considerable amounts on providing
healthcare as a result of smoking induced illness than just banning Tobacco
related advertisements. Do you agree to this sentence? If Yes, specify why? If
No, elaborate with relevant logic.
5. It is
medically proven that Cigarettes causes cancer. Then why is the Indian
government not banning cigarettes selling once and for all?
6. Why do you
think a company like ITC, which highly depends on profits earned from tobacco
business, voluntarily agreed to withdraw from all the sponsorship events, even
before the government declared about banning of cigarette advertisements?
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