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80 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (1999)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0077 and id is 1 raw text is: May 4, 1999 No. 80
THE FEDERAL TOBACCO SUIT:
TAXATION THROUGH LITIGATION
INSTEAD OF LEGISLATION
The Clinton Administration is proposing to sue
tobacco companies to recover the costs that
smoking   supposedly  imposes on    the  federal
government for the     Medicare  and   Medicaid
programs. The President still wants a tobacco tax
increase for the same purpose; his Fiscal Year 2000

Budget promises to seek an
additional $0.55 cents a pack.
(This is on top of the $0.15 a
pack increase being phased in
between 2000 and 2002 under
the so-called Taxpayer Relief
Act of 1997).
The tax hike might not get
very far. Last year, Congress
retreated from proposals to
boost the tax by another $1.10
to $1.50 a pack. At a time of
projected budget surpluses, it
was   hard  to  justify  the
proposals as anything other
than what they were, an easy
money grab that would have
fallen mainly on low   and
middle income smokers, and

Whether
money

smokers, tobacco
tobacco company e
shareholders in soi
either way.

that was stirring

unexpectedly strong resentment among its potential
victims. Another round this year would not be any
more popular.

Institute for
Research on the
Economics of
Taxation

The Administration may be hoping that a
lawsuit against the tobacco companies will not
encounter as much Congressional opposition as a tax
hike, since any adverse price effect on smokers
would be indirect, and, if noticed, could be blamed
on the courts. Nonetheless, a lawsuit does require
some action by Congress. The Administration has
asked it to approve an appropriation of $20 million
for the Justice Department to start work on the case.
Whether the government takes money from the
tobacco companies through an increase in the
cigarette excise tax or through a lawsuit, the result
will be an increase in the cost of cigarettes. A
lawsuit is simply a tax imposed by litigation instead
of legislation. The burden of any damage award or
tax hike will fall on smokers, tobacco growers, and
tobacco company employees and shareholders in
some proportion either way.
The Administration's contention that smoking

imposes additional

the government takes
from   the   tobacco

costs on the Medicare and
Medicaid systems, and that
smokers should pay more for
cigarettes as a result, is as
wrongheaded an excuse for a
lawsuit as it is for a tobacco
tax hike. Study after study has
found  that current tobacco
excise taxes raise government
revenues by substantially more
than smoking-related illnesses
raise government outlays.1

grower-s, and        Smoking   may   increase
imployees and      outlays    somewhat     in
ne proportion      government   funded  health
programs, but not by the full
cost of treating these disorders.
The chief effect of smoking-
related illness is to change the
timing and type of illness, but not necessarily the
lifetime cost of treatment, of a Medicare or
Medicaid enrollee. People who die at age 65 from
a smoking-related ailment do not die at age 75 from

companies through an increase in
the cigarette excise tax or through
a lawsuit, the result will be an
increase in the cost of cigarettes.
A lawsuit is simply a tax imposed
by litigation instead of legislation.
The  burden   ... will fall on

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., Suite 910, Washington, D.C. 20006
Voice 202-463-1400 e Fax 202-463-6199 0 Internet www.iret.org

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