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127 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2002)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0124 and id is 1 raw text is: Congressio°na
Avsor
April 16, 2002 No. 127
CONFUSING, MISLEADING CDC
FIGURES ON ECONOMIC COSTS
OF SMOKING
On April 12, the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention released a widely-quoted report
entitled Annual Smoking-Attributable Mortality,
Years of Potential Life Lost, and Economic Costs -
United States, 1995-1999. The report contained
new estimates of the cost of smoking in terms of
higher medical bills and what it calls lost
productivity. The productivity figures are really
lost production, i.e., output and income of
smokers due to early death.' There are several
problems with the study and the interpretation
usually accorded such figures by the media.
The CDC report should not be regarded as a
good piece of economic analysis nor as a guide to
social policy. If people die, then the output they
would have produced and the income they would
have received for producing it are lost. It is
important to bear in mind, however, that this loss of
output and income is borne by the smoker and his
family, not by society or the economy. The
CDC report does not make this clear. A worker or
saver is paid for what he adds to output. His pay or
investment income entitles him to buy as much of
other people's output as he himself has produced.
If he does not produce, he loses a corresponding
claim to other people's production, and the loss is

his and his family's, and no one else's. He pays
taxes, of course, in effect turning some of his output
over to pay the people who provide government
services, and if he dies, the tax revenue dies with
him. But, at least on average, the taxpaying public
is supposed to receive services equal to the value of
the taxes they pay. Unless the government sector is
systematically  exploiting  the  rest of the
population, this is a wash.
Smoking entails health costs. Smokers clearly
spend more on medical care at the times when
smoking makes them ill than they would if it did
not affect their health. Insofar as they pay for this
care with their own money, it comes at the expense
of the family's consumption of other products, and
takes nothing from other people. Of course, the
medical outlays may be covered by insurance. In
well-run insurance plans provided by private
carriers, smokers are often charged higher premiums
than non-smokers, and the smokers bear the cost of
smoking.
Smokers   die  earlier  than  non-smokers.
Consequently, they draw smaller Social Security
retirement benefits than non-smokers. Smokers do
incur Medicare costs earlier than non-smokers, but
smoking substitutes for other causes of death that
also involve high Medicare costs. On balance, most
studies find that smokers cost the government less
in terms of health care outlays than the sum of what
they save the government in unclaimed retirement
benefits and pay the government in tobacco taxes at
existing tax rates.2
The CDC study noted that such effects of
smoking as disability, absenteeism, excess work
breaks etc, which are more related to what we
usually think of as productivity, were not
measured. Indeed, it would be hard to estimate
them. (And to be fully objective, if one were to try
to measure the effect of smoking on productivity,
one should note that many smokers consider
nicotine to be a stimulent and would say that

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

IRET is a non-profit, tax exempt 501(c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing the
public about policies that will promote economic growth and efficient operation of the free market economy.
1730 K Street, N.W., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 9 Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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